St. Petersburg Times Online: News of Florida
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
  • Choking the Glades
  • Q&A: Michael Pheneger
  • Fear and knowing in Immokalee
  • Car, body found in golf course pond
  • Workers disinfect virus-laden Disney cruise ship -- again
  • Spacewalker frees stalled railcar

  • From the state wire

  • Hurricane Jeanne appears on track to hit Florida's east coast
  • Rumor mill working overtime after Florida hurricanes
  • Developments associated with Hurricanes Ivan and Jeanne
  • Four killed in Panhandle plane crash were on Ivan charity mission
  • Hurricane Frances caused estimated $4.4 billion in insured damage
  • Disabled want more handicapped-accessible voting machines
  • USF forces administrators to resign over test score changes
  • Man's death at Universal Studios ruled accidental
  • State child welfare workers in Miami fail to do background checks
  • Hurricane Jeanne heads toward southeast U.S. coast
  • Hurricane Jeanne spurs more anxiety for storm-weary Floridians
  • Mistrial declared in case where teen was target of racial "joke"
  • Panhandle utility wants sewer plant moved to higher ground
  • State employee arrested on theft, bribery charges
  • Homestead house fire kills four children, one adult
  • Pierson leader tries to cut off relief to local fern cutters
  • Florida's high court rules Terri's law unconstitutional
  • Jacksonville students punished for putting stripper pole in dorm
  • FEMA handling nearly 600,000 applications for help
  • Man who killed wife, niece, self also killed mother in 1971
  • Producer sues city over lead ball fired by Miami police
  • Tourism suffers across Florida after pummeling by hurricanes
  • Key dates in the life of Terri Schiavo
  • An excerpt from the unanimous ruling in the Schiavo case
  • Four confirmed dead after small plane crash in Panhandle
  • Correction: Disney-Cruise Line story
  • tampabay.com

    printer version

    Spacewalker frees stalled railcar

    ©Associated Press
    December 1, 2002

    CAPE CANAVERAL -- A railcar crucial to the construction of the international space station stalled on its tracks Saturday, but a spacewalking astronaut got it moving again.

    Within minutes, John Herrington had found an obstruction: The railcar's cable-reel assembly was hung up on a radio antenna on the space station's newest girder.

    Mission Control instructed him to deploy the stowed antenna in hopes of clearing the snag. The antenna would not budge, but he managed to free it.

    The spacewalk by Herrington and Michael Lopez-Alegria had been planned so they could complete work on the newly installed $390-million girder.

    Flight controllers initially suspected the railcar problem might have been caused by a momentary loss of computer data. But later, they said the railcar probably snagged on something while traveling down the tracks.

    Astronauts inside the space station zoomed in on the area with cameras but didn't see anything unusual. So Mission Control asked the spacewalkers to check the railcar and two minicarts linked to it.

    The $190-million railcar was empty when it abruptly stopped, after traveling about 45 feet, 10 feet short of its destination. It had just crossed onto the new girder, which was delivered by space shuttle Endeavour last week.

    After a 51/2-hour interruption, the railcar resumed its trip down the tracks and reached its destination.

    The space station's 58-foot arm was supposed to be maneuvered onto the railcar to serve as a crane during Saturday's spacewalk. But Mission Control warned Herrington and Lopez-Alegria, visiting from Endeavour, that they might have to perform some of their work on the new girder without the use of the arm.

    Back to State news
    Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
     
    Special Links
    Lucy Morgan


    From the Times state desk