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The funny thing is the programme is picking up a lot more of these issues because of the focus on safety. If they go back to the old ways the shuttle would probably have launched on time and would probably have performed fine but with a failed APU.
On the other hand, lives could have been lost.
So yes, there are more scrubs but these very scrubs are SAVING lives not wasting them.
The really sad thing is that NASA is just getting good at this, just starting to understand the issues, understand how to deal with these issues and turn them around and the programme is being pulled from under them.
When the new system goes live these lessons will need to be learnt all over again.
I'm also a member of NASASpaceflight's L2 area. Engineers post there and watching the posts the dedication to the fleet, to this final flight of Endeavour and to doing it right is remarkable to watch.
I just wish the company I worked for as my day job had such due dillegence.
Edit to add:
I just came across this Pete Conrad quote:
"If you don't know what to do, don't do anything." — Conrad's advice for working in space
Today, engineers didn't know what to do with regard to the APU heaters. So they followed Conrads advice and scrubbed the launch to get more data. That's how you stay safe in space.
On the other hand, lives could have been lost.
So yes, there are more scrubs but these very scrubs are SAVING lives not wasting them.
The really sad thing is that NASA is just getting good at this, just starting to understand the issues, understand how to deal with these issues and turn them around and the programme is being pulled from under them.
When the new system goes live these lessons will need to be learnt all over again.
I'm also a member of NASASpaceflight's L2 area. Engineers post there and watching the posts the dedication to the fleet, to this final flight of Endeavour and to doing it right is remarkable to watch.
I just wish the company I worked for as my day job had such due dillegence.
Edit to add:
I just came across this Pete Conrad quote:
"If you don't know what to do, don't do anything." — Conrad's advice for working in space
Today, engineers didn't know what to do with regard to the APU heaters. So they followed Conrads advice and scrubbed the launch to get more data. That's how you stay safe in space.
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