1 / 18

APOLLO 13 Safety Message

APOLLO 13 Safety Message. Bob Sieck Odyssey Spacecraft NASA Project Engineer April 1970. APRIL 1970. OUR NATION - Vietnam war dominated mood of society - Unemployment, inflation rising - Active aerospace industry SPACE PROGRAM

amelie
Télécharger la présentation

APOLLO 13 Safety Message

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. APOLLO 13Safety Message Bob Sieck Odyssey Spacecraft NASA Project Engineer April 1970

  2. APRIL 1970 • OUR NATION - Vietnam war dominated mood of society - Unemployment, inflation rising - Active aerospace industry • SPACE PROGRAM - Good public support - Apollo successful , high confidence & risk tolerance - Apollo program end in sight - Apollo follow on programs: - Skylab, significantly less resources than Apollo - Shuttle debated in Congress

  3. KSC - Robust ( 24/7 ) work environment, 3 missions in flow - Large ( 20 K + ) Government & Contractor team - Skilled team, stable procedures - Safety emphasis high, many hazardous operations, some incidents - Some end of program concern - Management–stay focused, give the workforce high quality “tools”

  4. SPACECRAFT CRYOGENIC SYSTEM - Service Module cryogenic tanks supply GO2 & GH2 for fuel cells & breathing O2 * fill & drain tubes ( ground servicing), quantity gauges, pressure & temperature monitor, relief valve * heaters; 400w @ 65v DC (GSE), 80w @ 28v (fuel cell) * thermostat set to turnoff heater power @ 80 deg F * fans for mixture; 120vac, 26# wire

  5. LO2 TANK #2 SCENARIO - Handling incident, subjected to high loads in plant * Cleared for installation, shipped to KSC - Standard Apollo countdown demo test with cryos, unable to detank LO2 tank #2 * Suspect cause - internal drain tube (not used in flight) - Approved procedure to boil off LO2 with tank heaters * During detank, temperature visibility lost, stopped test * Continued after engineering management conference - Tank cleared for mission at final readiness review

  6. APOLLO MISSION Launch Count – service cryos, test heaters & fans. Nominal mission - 10 days, - Trans Lunar injection & CSM/LM docking approx LO + 3 hrs - CSM/LM undock for Lunar landing approx LO + 4 days Apollo 13 - explosion occurred LO + 2 days & 7 hrs - Seventh fan cycle since LO - LM activation approx 1 ½ hrs later - Crew returned @ LO + 6 days

  7. ACCIDENT FACTORS • Technical - Thermostat switches not certified to GSE power level , contacts “arced’, stayed closed (no measurement) - Continuous ground power (8 hrs) resulted in 1000 deg F temperature at top of heater, melted fan wire insulation - Un insulated wires near metal components in O2 tank setup conditions for ignition when power applied

  8. ACCIDENT FACTORS • Underlying Issues - Tank internal structure questionable due to factory installation handling incident - Inability to detank with standard procedure at KSC indicated internal damage - Improvised detank procedure had no prior test or certification - Performed hazardous ground operations with inadequate visibility

  9. ACCIDENT REVIEW BOARD FINDINGS - Decision to fly hardware with known – unknown damage - Performed nonstandard procedures: * without verifying certification of affected hardware * without adequate visibility - Positive finding : the work authorization and documentation process was followed

  10. ACCIDENT REVIEW BOARD RECOMMENDATIONS - Reassess certification of all hardware, assure test requirements correctly reflect certification basis - Formalize procedure for designer approval of non standard test/operations procedures ( Bldg 45 “CHIT” system ) - Remove cryo tank fans and wiring, add separate LO2 tank All changes implemented, less than one year impact to Apollo 14 mission

  11. LESSONS LEARNED - Test as you fly , fly as you test. - Most major incidents are the result of a series of events and decisions. - Non standard operations should be reviewed with a “what could go wrong” approach.

  12. BACKUP

More Related