NASA spent October hoisting a 103-ton simulator section onto a test stand to prep for the next Moon mission

NASA spent the last two weeks hoisting a 103-ton component onto a simulator and installing it to help prepare for the next Moon missions. Crews fitted the interstage simulator component onto the Thad Cochran Test Stand at Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. The connecting section mimics the same SLS (Space Launch System) part that will help protect the rocket’s upper stage, which will propel the Orion spacecraft on its planned Artemis launches.

The Thad Cochran Test Stand is where NASA sets up the SLS components and conducts thorough testing to ensure they’ll be safe and operating as intended on the versions that fly into space. The new section was installed onto the B-2 position of the testing center and is now fitted with all the necessary piping, tubing and electrical systems for future test runs.

Top-down view of the SLS interstage section installed at a test center.NASA

The interstage section will protect electrical and propulsion systems and support the SLS’s EUS (Exploration Upper Stage) in the rocket’s latest design iteration, Block 1B. It will replace the current Block 1 version and offer a 40 percent bigger payload. The EUS will support 38 tons of cargo with a crew or 42 tons without a crew, compared to 27 tons of crew and cargo in the Block 1 iteration. (Progress!) Four RL10 engines, made by contractor L3Harris, will power the new EUS.

The interstage simulator section NASA spent mid-October installing weighs 103 tons and measures 31 feet in diameter and 33 feet tall. The section’s top portion will absorb the EUS hot fire thrust, transferring it back to the test stand so the test stand doesn’t collapse under the four engines’ more than 97,000 pounds of thrust.

NASA’s testing at Stennis Space Center will prepare the SLS for the Artemis IV mission, which will send four astronauts aboard the Orion spacecraft to the Lunar Gateway space station to install a new module. After that, they’ll descend to the Moon’s surface in the Starship HLS (Human Landing System) lunar lander.

You can catch some glimpses into NASA’s heavy lifting in the video below:

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/nasa-spent-october-hoisting-a-103-ton-simulator-section-onto-a-test-stand-to-prep-for-the-next-moon-mission-173008826.html?src=rss

HOT news

Related posts

Latest posts

XRP Worth Might Begin One other Rally: $7 Trillion Financial institution Proclaims Its Ripple Coin Funding

XRP value may be falling beneath its $1.40 assist, however UBS, a Swiss banking big managing $7 trillion in belongings, has disclosed XRP publicity...

What Does ETH Must Surge Previous $3,000 Once more as Whales Are Abandoning Ship?

Ethereum’s native coin lastly managed to interrupt its all-time excessive in the course of the 2025 rally, however solely mildly in comparison with different...

InMusic will purchase Native Devices, placing it below the identical umbrella as Akai

The corporate additionally owns Moog and M-Audio, so this creates an business juggernaut.

Large Double-Digit Features From These Alts as BTC Returns to $80K: Weekend Watch

Bitcoin’s value slide under $80,000 didn’t final lengthy, because the asset reclaimed that degree yesterday following US President Trump’s announcement of a three-day ceasefire...

Bitcoin Holds Above $79K as Oil Rises on Hormuz Tensions; Bitcoin Hyper Presale Reaches $32.6M

Bitcoin remained hyper above $79,000 on Friday, 8 Could 2026, at the same time as contemporary navy exchanges between the U.S. and Iran within...

Want to stay up to date with the latest news?

We would love to hear from you! Please fill in your details and we will stay in touch. It's that simple!