SEATTLE — Seattle’s Museum of Flight moved a nose closer to exhibiting a full-size mockup of the space shuttle June 30 with the delivery of the front section of a retired astronaut trainer by a large NASA cargo plane.

Thousands of spectators gathered for a “Shuttlefest” in the museum’s parking lot to see the Super Guppy aircraft deliver the Full Fuselage Trainer’s (FFT) crew compartment from NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Before landing at Boeing Field, the bulbous cargo plane circled the Seattle area — including flying by the city’s landmark Space Needle — then made a low pass over the Museum of Flight to the delight of the waiting crowd.

Once the aircraft was on the ground and towed into place, the Guppy’s flight crew began the process of swinging open the plane’s unique hinged nose to reveal and offload the nose of the mockup shuttle.

“I think I can speak for all Washingtonians when I say I am honored that such a critical part of our nation’s history will be right here in Washington state at the Museum of Flight,” Gov. Christine Gregoire (D) said during an arrival ceremony staged in front of the Super Guppy.

The Full Fuselage Trainer was used for more than 30 years to train every person who flew on the space shuttle how to exit the vehicle after emergency landings and to give them familiarity with the lighting inside the orbiter’s payload bay.

The crew compartment is a mostly wooden but detailed replica of the shuttle’s iconic black and white nose section with its interior, dual-level cockpit and living area. It was the first and most recognizable of the mockup’s three large segments to arrive at the museum.

Smaller parts, at least in relation to the crew cabin, were shipped to the museum earlier, including the FFT’s three mock main engines. Still to be delivered by the Super Guppy are the trainer’s 18-meter payload bay and the shuttle’s aft section that supports the vertical stabilizer, or tail, and twin maneuvering engine pods.

Once all the parts have arrived in Seattle later this summer, the museum plans to reassemble the wingless FFT in its Charles Simonyi Space Gallery, a 1,440-square-meter exhibition hall that was originally built to display a space-flown shuttle. Unlike the real orbiters’ displays, however, visitors to the Museum of Flight will be able to go inside and tour the trainer.

“Of course we went to bat, we wanted the shuttle. But I got to tell you, we got something much more unique,” Gregoire said. “Imagine what the kids will do when they get a chance to come to this museum, see the history and be a part of this trainer. We’ll be able to inspire a new generation of those who want to get involved in space.”

The Simonyi Gallery was named for the Hungarian-born self-funded astronaut and billionaire software developer after he donated $3 million to the museum’s building fund. He also loaned the institution one of the two Russian Soyuz capsules that took him twice on space tourist trips to the international space station.

The FFT’s crew cabin, which was shrink-wrapped in plastic and padded in foam before being loaded onto the Super Guppy, was secured for its flight atop a metal cargo carrier.

The 73,000-kilogram total assembly was offloaded from the aircraft using a Tunner, a military cargo loader, which in turn was used to position the cabin for cranes to hoist the mockup onto a wheeled steel base. The shuttle nose was then rolled into the Simonyi Gallery, where the public could view it beginning July 1.

 

Robert Z. Pearlman is editor of collectSPACE.com.