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Countdown! NASA Launch Vehicles and Facilities
PMS 018-B 
October 1991
Section 4


 

Rotating Service Structure

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The Rotating Service Structure provides protection for the orbiter and access to the cargo bay for installation and servicing of payloads at the pad. It pivots through one-third of a circle, to 120 degrees, from a retracted position well away from the Shuttle to where its payload changeout room doors meet and match the orbiter cargo bay doors. This structure rotates around a vertical hinge attached to one corner of the Fixed Service Structure. The body of the Rotating Service Structure begins at the 59-foot (18-meter) level and extends to 189 feet (57.6 meters) above the pad floor, providing orbiter access platforms at five levels. The hinge and a structural framework on the opposite end support the structure. This framework rests on two eight-wheel, motor-driven trucks, which ride on rails installed within the pad surface. The rotating body is 102 feet (31 meters) long, 50 feet (15 meters) wide, and 130 feet (40 meters) high. The primary purpose of the Rotating Service Structure is to receive Space Shuttle payloads while in the retracted position, rotate, and install them in the orbiter cargo bay. With the exception of Spacelab and other large payloads, spacecraft are loaded into the Shuttle at the pad. The largest payloads are installed while the orbiter is in the Orbiter Processing Facility. The Payload Changeout Room in the center of the structure provides an environmentally clean or "white room" condition in which to receive a payload transferred from a protective Payload Canister. Pad personnel maintain this cleanliness level by never exposing the spacecraft to the open air during the transfer operations. A clean-air purge maintains environmental control during cargo operations.

Personnel operate controls to hoist the Payload Canister to the proper elevation in the retracted Rotating Service Structure and lock it into position. The environmental seals in the structure inflate against the sides of the Canister. Clean, temperature- and humidity-controlled air purges the space between the closed doors of the Rotating Service Structure and the Canister. After the purge, the doors may be opened. The payload then transfers from the Canister into the Payload Changeout Room. The Canister and the Rotating Service Structure doors then close, the environmental seal deflates, and the Canister lowers to the Transporter to be taken off the pad. The Rotating Service Structure rolls into position to enclose the orbiter's payload bay, re-establishing the environmental seals and clean air purge. The Payload Changeout Room and payload bay doors open so that the payload may be installed.

Orbiter Midbody Umbilical Unit

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Hypergolic Umbilical System

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