NASA ‘Go’ for Artemis I Wet Dress Rehearsal Starting on Friday

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. (NASA PR) — In a pre-test review on March 28, NASA gave the “go” to proceed with the Artemis I wet dress rehearsal scheduled for April 1-3. The approximately two-day test will run the Artemis I launch team through operations to load propellant into the rocket’s tanks, conduct a full launch countdown, demonstrate the ability to recycle the countdown clock, and also drain the tanks to give them an opportunity to practice the timelines and procedures they will use for launch.
During the rehearsal, controllers will countdown to T-1 minutes and 30 seconds and pause to demonstrate the ability to hold for up to 3 minutes, then resume until 33 seconds before when launch would occur, then pause the countdown. Then they will recycle back to ten minutes before launch and conduct a second terminal countdown to approximately 9.3 seconds before launch, then end the countdown. Sometimes called a “scrub,” launch controllers may decide not to proceed with launch if a technical or weather issue arises during or prior to the countdown. At the end of the test, the team will drain the propellant to demonstrate the procedures that would be used during a launch scrub. After draining the tanks, the team will review the test data before setting an official target launch date.
NASA will provide a live video stream of the rocket and spacecraft at the launch pad beginning at Noon EDT on April 1 on the Kennedy Newsroom YouTube channel. In addition to updates on this blog, NASA also will provide operational updates on the Exploration Ground Systems Twitter account.
3 responses to “NASA ‘Go’ for Artemis I Wet Dress Rehearsal Starting on Friday”
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It looks that NASA SLS rehearsal has pushed the Axiom-1 flight until April 6, which means if they are any weather delays the next NASA crew flight, on April 19, will also be delayed.
By contrast, if NASA had let Axiom-1 go first and then done the Artemis 1 Rehearsal there would have no risk risk of delaying the NASA crew flight. You have to wonder if the Artemis folks and those at NASA managing the ISS even talk to one another.
no they dont
Just Jim Free playing monkey dominance games with Kathy Lueders I should think.