By TonyF on 30 November 2008 at 6:56PM
Endeavour has returned to the West Coast backup landing site, from a two-week mission to the International Space Station. Here are the stats:
Mission Elapsed Time:
15 days, 20 hours, 29 minutes, 37 secs
| Official Landing Times |
|
| Main gear touchdown: |
4:25:06PM EST |
| Nose gear touchdown: |
4:25:21PM EST |
| Wheels stop: |
4:26:03PM EST |
| Total miles: |
6.6 million |
NASA reports:

Image above: Space shuttle Endeavour and the STS-126 crew land at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. after completing a mission to the International Space Station. Credit: NASA TV
› Submit your comments on STS-126
With commander Chris Ferguson and pilot Eric Boe at the controls, space shuttle Endeavour descended to a smooth landing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The STS-126 crew members concluded their successful mission to the International Space Station when the shuttle touched down at 4:25 p.m. EST.
Endeavour arrived at the station Nov. 16, delivering equipment that will help allow the station to double its crew size to six. In addition, the STS-126 astronauts delivered Expedition 18 Flight Engineer Sandra Magnus, who replaced Greg Chamitoff, now a mission specialist who returned to Earth aboard Endeavour.
STS-126 is the 124th shuttle mission and 27th shuttle flight to visit the space station.
Discussion here. Check the links at right for play-by-play and NASA TV.
By TonyF on 30 November 2008 at 5:43PM
Shuttle Commander Chris "Fergie" Ferguson brought Endeavour home to a smooth landing at the West Coast backup landing site (using Edwards' temporary Runway 04), after a 250-orbit journey. NASA reports:

Space shuttle Endeavour glides to a safe landing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Photo credit: NASA
The STS-126 crew is working through a post-landing checklist for shutting down the orbiter after completing Endeavour's 22nd mission to the International Space Station.
It's been a little over 10 minutes since Endeavour and its crew touched down at Edwards Air Force Base in California.
A landing convoy will gather around the vehicle to begin "safing" procedures.
› STS-126 Mission Summary (475 kb PDF)
› STS-126 Press Kit (4.4 Mb PDF)
Discussion here. Check the links at right for play-by-play and NASA TV.
By TonyF on 30 November 2008 at 3:35PM
Endeavour fired its maneuvering rockets to drop out of orbit, on its way to a West Coast landing at Edwards AFB. On cable TV, CNN and Fox are showing brief segments. The burn took place at 3:19PM EST, which will bring the spaceraft gliding home at 4:25PM EST. NASA reports:

Deorbit to Edwards AFB on Orbit 250 for space shuttle Endeavour.
Image credit: NASA
The weather forecast is "no go" for landing at Kennedy Space Center in Florida today and tomorrow. A front moving through Florida will see storms around Kennedy's Shuttle Landing Facility on both days.
Mission controllers have given Endeavour the go-ahead for the first landing opportunity at 4:25 p.m. EST at Edwards Air Force Base in California today.
› STS-126 Mission Summary (475 kb PDF)
› STS-126 Press Kit (4.4 Mb PDF)
Check the links at right for play-by-play and NASA TV.
By TonyF on 30 November 2008 at 1:02PM
Both Florida landing opportunities have been scrubbed for today. Endeavour has two shots at landing in California today. If weather were forecasted to improve at KSC, mission managers might have kept the astronauts on orbit until tomorrow, but Nature is not cooperating. NASA reports:

Weather conditions forced flight controllers to pass on Endeavour’s second landing opportunity at Kennedy Space Center today. The next opportunity for STS-126 to land is at 4:25 p.m. EST at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
Endeavour arrived at the station Nov. 16, delivering equipment that will help allow the station to double its crew size to six. In addition, the STS-126 astronauts delivered Expedition 18 Flight Engineer Sandra Magnus, who replaced Greg Chamitoff, now a mission specialist returning to Earth aboard Endeavour.
STS-126 is the 124th shuttle mission and 27th shuttle flight to visit the space station.
Discussion here. Check the links at right for play-by-play and NASA TV.
By TonyF on 30 November 2008 at 10:11AM
Flight Day 17 is scheduled to be the last in space for the Shuttle crew. Weather around KSC may send Endeavour to Edwards AFB instead of home to Florida. The most likely landing opportunity would place deorbit burn at 3:20PM EST and touchdown at 4:25 p.m. EST (2125 GMT). NASA reports:

Image above: Astronaut Eric Boe, STS-126 pilot, checks on the lithium hydroxide canisters beneath the middeck of the space shuttle Endeavour. Credit: NASA
› Submit your comments on STS-126
Two landing opportunities are available for space shuttle Endeavour and the STS-126 crew at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., today. There also are two landing opportunities available at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
› View landing ground tracks
Endeavour's first landing opportunity is at 1:19 p.m. EST at Kennedy.
Endeavour arrived at the station Nov. 16, delivering equipment that will help allow the station to double its crew size to six. In addition, the STS-126 astronauts delivered Expedition 18 Flight Engineer Sandra Magnus, who replaced Greg Chamitoff, now a mission specialist returning to Earth aboard Endeavour.
STS-126 is the 124th shuttle mission and 27th shuttle flight to visit the space station.
Additional Resources
› Landing Ground Tracks
› STS-126 Press Kit (4.5 Mb PDF)
› STS-126 Mission Summary (475 kb PDF)
› Execute Packages
› About the Crew
› Shuttle Launch Manifest
Flight Day 16 videos are up at the JSC Gallery. Look for landing pics and video at KSC. Discussion here. Status Report #32 here. Check the links at right for play-by-play and NASA TV.
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