EARTH ORBIT, Dec. 14, 2006

Spacewalking Electricians Head Out Again

Second Spacewalk Will Rewire Half The Space Station; Other Half Scheduled For Saturday

    • Inside and ...

      Inside and ...  (AP)

    • ... Outside. Space shuttle Discovery astronaut Robert L. Curbeam, Jr., first prepares for a spacewalk, and then (above) goes outside to work on the international space station, Dec. 12, 2006.

      ... Outside. Space shuttle Discovery astronaut Robert L. Curbeam, Jr., first prepares for a spacewalk, and then (above) goes outside to work on the international space station, Dec. 12, 2006.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP)  Imagine rewiring your house while living in it. Now imagine you're not even sure the new power system will work and you're 220 miles above the Earth.

That's the scenario facing astronauts on the second and third spacewalks of the space shuttle Discovery's mission to the international space station, a two-part process scheduled for Thursday and Saturday.

Rewiring the station is an exciting turning point for NASA, one that graduates its orbital outpost from relying on an interim power system to establishing a permanent one that can begin accommodating more laboratories and lead ultimately to the completion of the space station.

"This is the major milestone," said John Curry, NASA's lead flight director for the space station. NASA and other space agencies will be able to increase the number of crew members aboard the space station — now at three — and other such expansions, Curry said. "Now you're limitless."

Discovery's crew awoke Thursday to a recording of Queen's "Under Pressure," a fitting message from Houston for the two spacewalking astronauts who will be under a tight schedule to get their complicated rewiring tasks done.

Astronauts Robert Curbeam and Christer Fuglesang, who performed Discovery's first spacewalk on Tuesday to install a two-ton, $11 million addition, were set to again step out of the space station Thursday, this time to reconfigure the power system controlling one-half of the space station. They will break and make some 160 connections Thursday (and Saturday), as they rewire the international space station for its permanent power grid, reports CBS News correspondent Peter King.

Half of the station will be powered down during this process. But critical systems, such as computers, will be switched to the other side temporarily.

There will be almost no television coverage during Thursday's spacewalk, reports King, because the station's system will be powered down as part of the "electrical bypass." Also, the shuttle's TV antenna would radiate too close to the spacewalking crew.

The third spacewalk will repeat this procedure, but on the flip side.

In both cases, NASA will for a short time lose the redundancy it likes to have in its systems.

Besides worrying whether the permanent power system will work as planned, NASA managers also will be looking to see whether its accompanying cooling system performs.

To get the station ready for this change, astronauts spent much of Wednesday retracting the temporary solar panel to give room for the new ones to begin rotating with the movement of the sun, generating as much power as possible for the station.

It was a long, frustrating day for the Discovery and space station crews, as 45 times they tried — and failed — to get the mast holding a pair of solar wings to fully retract, reports King.

The retraction went far enough to allow the new panels to rotate, but it did not go all the way like NASA had hoped. Stubborn kinks in the accordion-like structure and slackness in the guide wire were the two main obstacles. Experts began meeting to explore fixes for that.

One option would be to schedule a fourth spacewalk so astronauts could manually help the panel retract. But managers cautioned that an additional spacewalk may be needed to troubleshoot any problems arising from the rewiring — the main task for this mission.

The half-retracted array is structurally stable and poses no risks in its current configuration. NASA could ask the space station residents to perform a spacewalk after Discovery returns to Earth in a week, or it may find a potential solution using the remote control that was commanding the retraction. NASA managers expect to make a decision within the next couple of days.


©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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