Updates STS-135 Updates

Check out this great video about the RRM payload. Looks very cool! :)

 
Launch may slip to the 4th of July. Would be quite a way to end the Shuttle program!

NASASpaceflight via Twitter said:
STS-135 UPDATE: KSC *are* rescheduling STS-135 for a rollover of May 16. There is also a *potential* launch slip to July 4. Article later.
 
From CDR Chris Ferguson via Twitter:

Waiting to find out how the 134 delay will affect 135. It appears that there will be some delay...still not sure how long.
 
NASASpaceflight: STS-135: KSC realign schedule targets for a preliminary July 12 launch:
Kennedy Space Center (KSC) engineering teams have realigned processing targets for STS-135 to point towards a July 12 launch date. The preliminary target is dependant on numerous – and upcoming – factors, not least the need for Endeavour to launch on her re-planned May 16 date, but also a nominal pad turnaround and a smooth pre-launch flow for Atlantis herself.

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NASASpaceflight: STS-135: Atlantis heads to VAB for mating with ET-138

Spaceflight Now:

Some more photos of Atlantis going vertical from KSC Media Gallery:

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And a few shots of Robotic Refueling Mission (RRM) payload of STS-135, before its move into a payload canister:

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Launch now July 8.

NASASpaceflight via Twitter said:
STS-135 UPDATE: Official launch date for STS-135 is NET July 8 at 11:33 AM with a landing on July 20, thanks to good Pad 39A condition
 
Are you sure that's not from an aircraft ? I would think from the altitude and the angle, you would see the clouds making the shadows.
 
SpaceFlight Now:

While space shuttle Endeavour completes her final orbits of the planet tonight, sistership Atlantis will be traveling to Kennedy Space Center's launch pad 39A beginning at 8 p.m. EDT.

The ground team responsible for moving the spacecraft along the 3.5-mile stone-covered roadway from the Vehicle Assembly Building to the seaside pad is scheduled to report for duty at 4 p.m.

The crawler-transporter will hydraulically lift the mobile launching platform and carry the shuttle on the six-hour trip. If all goes according to plan, Atlantis should be secured atop the pad and the pad swing arms extended long before dawn.
 
Wow, really. I didn't know that they are so reusable! http://spaceflightnow.com/shuttle/sts135/fdf/135srbs.pdf

Edit: Even one from STS-107. Hail Columbia!

Several parts from STS-107. I'm even more surprised about the STS-1 part, even a part from STS-3 on there. wow!

Possibly one of the best coincidences of the Space Programme, where the final flight makes use of a part that helped launch the very first flight :)
 
Space shuttle Endeavor will land about 30 minutes after Atlantis gets to the launch pad.
 
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