NASA suspends Orion space capsule test in ocean

PTI Updated - March 12, 2018 at 03:38 PM.

A test version of the Orion spacecraft is tethered inside the well deck of the USS San Diego prior to testing between NASA and the U.S. Navy. To safely bring Orion home after splashdown, it will be towed into the flooded well deck and secured in a special cradle before the water is drained. Image courtesy: NASA website

NASA has scrubbed a test off the California coast involving recovery of a mock-up of its newest space capsule after it was discovered that the cables were not strong enough to handle the turbulence.

In a statement today, the space agency said crews had trouble tying down the Orion capsule inside the well deck of the USS San Diego during yesterday’s exercise. It was not clear when it would be rescheduled.

Orion is designed to carry astronauts into deep space and return to Earth by splashing down into the ocean, similar to a technique used in the 1960s and 1970s before the space shuttle era.

NASA and the Navy have been practising for the recovery of Orion, which will make its first unmanned flight this fall.

Published on February 22, 2014 07:38