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Space shuttle Endeavour preps for parade, the final leg of its California tour
In addition, engineers will replace and reconfigure Endeavour's engines and crew cabins to prepare it for display in its new home at the California Science Center.

By

Robert Z. Pearlman, SPACE.com
Mon, Sep 24 2012 at 10:08 AM
 4

Related Topics:

NASA, Space Shuttle
The overland transporter is moved into position below the space shuttle Endeavour not long after the orbiter was demated from the NASA 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft on Sept. 22

The overland transporter is moved into position below the space shuttle Endeavour not long after the orbiter was demated from the NASA 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft on Sept. 22. (Photo: Bill Ingalls/NASA)

LOS ANGELES — Space shuttle Endeavour, now a permanent resident of the state of California, has traded its winged chariot for a set of custom wheels.
 
Early on Sept. 22, the shuttle was hoisted by cranes off the modified Boeing 747 jumbo jet that flew it to a landing at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) the day before. Endeavour's touchdown, which was preceded by a flyover tour of the state to the delight of millions of spectators, was the final airborne leg of the orbiter's delivery to the California Science Center (CSC) for display.
 
Next up: a road trip.
 
To prepare Endeavour for its 12-mile (19-kilometer) parade through the city streets of Inglewood and Los Angeles next month, NASA's team first had to remove the orbiter from the back of the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA) and then load it onto a modified overland transporter.
 
Using a very similar, two-crane contraption to what was deployed earlier this year to hoist sister ship Discovery and the prototype Enterprise from the same jetliner after their ferry flights to Washington, D.C., and New York City, the 155,000-pound (70,000-kilogram) Endeavour was carefully raised so that the aircraft could back away and the transporter could drive in underneath. The shuttle was then lowered on to the wheeled platform.
 
The cranes, as well as a network of cables that served as wind restraints, were anchored to the airport's apron by 200 attach points earlier drilled into the tarmac. The decision to complete the de-mate process overnight was made to avoid the deafening noise from arriving and departing airplanes, which could interfere with the critical communications between the 30 people working the operation. [Gallery: Endeavour Demated from Carrier Aircraft]
 
The air- and- spacecraft now separated, Endeavour will move into a United Airlines hangar to be further prepared for its transport and display. The SCA meanwhile is scheduled to make its final flight on Sept. 24 to NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., where it will be grounded and become a parts donor for NASA's SOFIA airborne astronomical observatory.
 
Inside the hangar, technicians will remove from Endeavour's aft the aerodynamic tail cone that was added for its ferry flight from Florida, reposition the shuttle's replica main engines from their tucked-for-flight orientation and install nozzles on the orbiter's maneuvering system pods. They'll also enter Endeavour's crew cabin to configure it for the science center's curators and retrieve from inside thousands of embroidered patches that were flown on Endeavour for the ferry flight at the center's request.
 
On Oct. 12, Endeavour, riding the same transporter that was previously used to move its sister ships between their Palmdale, Calif. assembly plant to Dryden for ferrying to the KennedySpace Center in Florida, will emerge from its temporary airport hangar home and roll out onto the streets of Inglewood. The procession will pick up in earnest the next day, when the space shuttle is moved in full public view from Inglewood City Hall to the California Science Center at Exposition Park, where it's expected to arrive by dusk.
 
Along the route, Endeavour's delivery will be celebrated by a musical dance and aerial performance choreographed by famed actress Debbie Allen. Before arriving at the CSC, the towing duties for the space shuttle will be turned over to a Toyota Tundra pickup truck as part of a partnership and sponsorship to raise upwards of $500,000 for Endeavour's permanent display.
 
At the CSC, the shuttle will be exhibited atop the transporter inside the temporary Samuel Oschin Space Shuttle Endeavour Display Pavilion, a large hangar that was recently built beside the center's main building. Ultimately, the CSC plans to position Endeavour on a recreation of its launch pad, complete with twin booster and external fuel tank, inside its planned Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center to be ready to begin inspiring visitors by 2017.
 
See shuttles.collectspace.com for continuing coverage of the delivery and display of NASA's retired space shuttles.
 
Follow collectSPACE on Facebook and Twitter @collectSPACE and editor Robert Pearlman @robertpearlman. Copyright 2012 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved.
 
Related on SPACE.com:
 
  • How NASA Flies Space Shuttles on 747 Jets (Photos)
  • NASA's Space Shuttle – From Top to Bottom (Infographic)
  • Photos: Shuttle Endeavour's California Sightseeing Tour
 
This story was originally written for SPACE.com and was reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved.

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leahtoddsonne's picture
leahtoddsonne Sep 24 2012 at 5:40 PM
As a Canadian, I watch with horror as these space enthusiasts wreck havoc on the natural environment of their own planet, to glorify a space program that has done nothing to feed, cloth or house needy folks here on earth. Is this an example of how these scientist plan to treat other planets? The trees they plan to chop down provide a direct link with the God who asks us to "replenish" the earth, to care for and feed each other both spiirtually and with food for the body. Trees help clean the air.
.... More
Trees give us the unlimited beauty of nature God has provided for us right here on the plent earth. Ask them to put the money on creating a proper affordable housing program for the needy! Or maybe they could teach more people how to grow food locally, organically and start to create farmiing communities that are self sustainable. Just don't let them cut down healthy trees.
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anonymous
Guest Oct 18 2012 at 11:34 AM

NASA had to cut down 400 trees in order to accomplish this incredible journey! For your information, NASA is re-planting 800 trees in the process. Maybe you should research the facts before posting a one sided opinion!

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anonymous
Guest Oct 02 2012 at 3:28 AM

They are just trees!!!!! They grow back, the planet is full of plenty of them. You're putting too much into the trees. Los Angeles is not Portland Oregon, it a concrete jungle.. nobody will miss the trees... plus they are being replaced with similar sized trees after the parade. It's our national pride to have had the shuttle program... you know your maple syrup industry drills millions of hole in gods trees!

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jjec6263
jjec6263 Sep 24 2012 at 4:07 PM

I saw the final flight of Space Shuttle Endeavour over our school. It was an amazing and historic sight. Kids, teachers, everyone ran out of the classroom to look. Then it was gone.

I wrote a blog about it. http://coolasiankids.blogspot.com/2012/09/witnessing-space-shuttle-endea...

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