KSC-04PD-1839.jpg KSC-04PD-1838ThumbnailsKSC-04PD-1840KSC-04PD-1838ThumbnailsKSC-04PD-1840
From left, Martin Wilson, manager of Thermal Protection System (TPS) operations for United Space Alliance, briefs NASA Administrator Sean OKeefe, KSC Director of the Spaceport Services Scott Kerr, NASA Associate Administrator of the Space Operations Mission Directorate William Readdy, and Center Director James Kennedy (right) on the temporary tile shop set up in the RLV hangar. OKeefe and Readdy are visiting KSC to survey the damage sustained by KSC facilities from Hurricane Frances. The Thermal Protection System Facility (TPSF), which creates the TPS tiles, blankets and all the internal thermal control systems for the Space Shuttles, is almost totally unserviceable at this time after losing approximately 35 percent of its roof in the storm, which blew across Central Florida Sept. 4-5. Undamaged equipment was removed from the TPSF and stored in the hangar. NASAs three Space Shuttle orbiters -- Discovery, Atlantis and Endeavour along with the Shuttle launch pads, all of the critical flight hardware for the orbiters and the International Space Station, and NASAs Swift spacecraft, awaiting launch in October, were well protected and unharmed.
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Kennedy Space Center
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NASA
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From left, Martin Wilson, manager of Thermal Protection System (TPS) operations for United Space Alliance, briefs NASA Administrator Sean OKeefe, KSC Director of the Spaceport Services Scott Kerr, NASA Associate Administrator of the Space Operations Mission Directorate William Readdy, and Center Director James Kennedy (right) on the temporary tile shop set up in the RLV hangar. OKeefe and Readdy are visiting KSC to survey the damage sustained by KSC facilities from Hurricane Frances. The Thermal Protection System Facility (TPSF), which creates the TPS tiles, blankets and all the internal thermal control systems for the Space Shuttles, is almost totally unserviceable at this time after losing approximately 35 percent of its roof in the storm, which blew across Central Florida Sept. 4-5. Undamaged equipment was removed from the TPSF and stored in the hangar. NASAs three Space Shuttle orbiters -- Discovery, Atlantis and Endeavour along with the Shuttle launch pads, all of the critical flight hardware for the orbiters and the International Space Station, and NASAs Swift spacecraft, awaiting launch in October, were well protected and unharmed.
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