Pad abort test
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A pad abort test is a test of a launch escape system to determine how well the system could get the crew of a spacecraft to safety in an emergency on the launch pad.
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[edit] Project Mercury
The Mercury program included several pad abort tests for the launch escape system with a boilerplate crew module.
- 1959 July 22 - First successful pad abort flight test with a functional escape tower attached to a Mercury Boilerplate.
- 1959 July 28 - A Mercury Boilerplate with instruments to measure sound pressure levels and vibrations from the Little Joe test rocket and Grand Central abort rocket/escape tower.
[edit] Project Apollo
The Apollo program included several pad abort tests for the launch escape system with a boilerplate crew module.
- Pad Abort Test-1 was conducted on November 7, 1963, and
- Pad Abort Test-2 was conducted on June 29, 1965.
Both tests were conducted at the White Sands Missile Range.
[edit] Orion
The Orion Pad Abort Test will start with the construction of the first Orion Boilerplate. It will be a basic mockup prototype to test the assembling sequences and launch procedures at NASA’s Langley Research Center while Lockheed aerospace engineers assemble the first rocket motors for the spacecraft’s escape tower. The first Pad Abort Tests trials of the escape tower system will be at New Mexico’s White Sands Missile Range in 2008. Lockheed Martin Corp. was awarded the contract to build Orion on Aug. 31, 2006.
- Further information: Boilerplate (rocketry)#Orion Boilerplate[3]
- See also: List of Constellation missions
[edit] See Also:
Soyuz T-10-1 mission was unsuccessful; however the launch escape system worked perfectly and saved the crew.
- Further information: Soyuz T-10-1#Mission highlights
[edit] References
- ^ Mercury Pad Abort Tests
- ^ NASA History Archives
- ^ NASA's Project Constellaton Official Site