Two mammoth space-age Solid Rocket Motors started their journey on Tuesday, Oct. 10 to a high-profile — and eventually vertical — reunion with the Space Shuttle Endeavour in Los Angeles’ Exposition Park.
Heavy-duty big rigs pulled the massive engines — donated by Northrop Grumman — from hangars where they’d been stored at the Mojave Air and Space Port north of Lancaster and set out on the road to L.A. Motorists got an eyeful as the motors, each measuring 116 feet long and more than 12 feet in diameter, rolled toward the city. Each one weighs 104,000 pounds.
The public is being invited to view the arrival as the motors are hauled off the Harbor (110) Freeway and driven along Figueroa Street and into the California Science Center on Wednesday morning.
Beginning at 7:30 a.m. the rocket motors will be hauled north on Figueroa Street from 43rd Place to 39th Street. When the motors reach Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard at 8 a.m., they will pause for an extended photo opportunity before officially moving to the Science Center at 9 a.m. The Science Center will open early at 9 a.m. Wednesday for the arrival celebration.
The arrival of the motors will occur 11 years to the day that Endeavour began its captivating cross-town journey from LAX to the Science Center.
The rocket motors are the major components of the twin Solid Rocket Boosters that were used to propel the shuttles into space, using fuel from a connected massive external tank. All of the launch components — the shuttle, rocket boosters and fuel tank — will be included in the vertical display of Endeavour at its new home in the $400 million, 200,000-square-foot Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center.
When completed, the display will be the only vertical, launch-ready configuration of a shuttle in the world.
Endeavour has been on display horizontally at the Science Center for 11 years. The massive external fuel tank is already at the Science Center, awaiting its upright positioning in the…
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