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Stennis Celebrates 40 Years Of Engine Testing

The first S-II-T booster to be tested at Stennis is installed on the center's A-2 Test Stand. Image credit: NASA
by Staff Writers
Stennis Space Center MS (SPX) Apr 20, 2006
On April 23, 1966, an earth-rattling roar broke the morning silence and swept southern Mississippi and Louisiana into the Space Age. The roar was the sound of the first rocket engine static test-firing at what is now NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center. The S-II-T tested comprised a cluster of five J-2 engines, the second stage of the Saturn V moon rocket.

When President John F. Kennedy made his historic 1961 announcement that the United States would put humans on the moon by the end of the decade, the plan called for a place to test the huge rocket engines.

On July 20, 1969, just three years after that first test, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the lunar surface, safely transported 238,857 miles by the 36-story Saturn V rocket, whose boosters were tested and proven flight-worthy in Hancock County, Miss.

Ten Apollo missions were successfully launched by the engines tested at Stennis.

Mississippi's influential Sen. John C. Stennis – who served from 1947 to 1989, and for whom the center is named - supported the selection of his home state as the place to build the test facility.

The site's water access was essential for transporting large rocket stages between the Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, Stennis, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The nearly 2,000-mile trip took the barges up and down the Tennessee River, Mississippi River, the Atlantic Coast and across parts of the Gulf of Mexico.

The vast tracts of densely-forested land around the Hancock County site provided a natural acoustical buffer zone to shield surrounding communities from the rumble of the engine tests. That 125,000-acre buffer zone is now considered a national asset.

"Stennis is the last place in the country where we can test large engines or whole rocket stages," said NASA Administrator Michael Griffin during a recent visit to the center.

At the time the Mississippi Test Facility, as it was called then, was built, it was the largest construction project in Mississippi and the second largest in the United States.

Begun in May 1963, construction was complete and the center operational for rocket engine testing less than three years later.

Stennis technicians tested each of the F-1 rocket engines that powered the first stage(S-IC) of the 364-foot-tall Saturn V launch vehicle for the Apollo missions. The F-1 measured 19 feet tall, produced 1.5 million pounds of thrust and weighed 10 tons.

The dual-position test stand built to accommodate the mammoth vehicle measured 264 feet tall with an overhead crane reaching more than 300 feet. The stand remains one of the tallest structures in Mississippi.

When the five-engine cluster of F-1 engines was test-fired for the first time March 3, 1967, windows shattered in nearby communities. The engines gave the booster a total thrust of 7.5 million pounds, taking the vehicle to a height of about 36 miles and to a speed of about 6,000 mph.

Stennis's vital role in proving the worthiness of the engines that propelled the Apollo program spawned the adage: If you want to go to the Moon, first you have to go through Hancock County.

The center's primary mission of testing the Saturn V rocket for the Apollo program continued until the early 1970s, when its facilities were modified to test the space shuttle's main engines. Since then, all shuttle engines have been tested and proven flight-worthy at Stennis.

The center continues to test components for future-generation launch vehicles, including the rockets intended to replace the space shuttle fleet with a new spacecraft to return humans to the Moon before the end of the next decade, paving the way for eventual journeys to Mars and beyond.

Related Links
NASA Stennis Space Center

NASA Achieves LOX-Methane Test-Firing Milestone
Huntsville AL (SPX) Apr 17, 2006
NASA said Monday that engineers have successfully completed a 103-second hot-fire test of an engine fueled by liquid oxygen and liquid methane.

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