First, we walked to the back of the building just like we did in OPF 1. The large platforms are closed around the back so you can't really see anything.

When you walk under the platforms what seems like a low ceiling is actually the orbiter directly above your head. This picture shows the back wheels. The black stuff is tiles on the belly of the ship. When most visitors get a tour of the OPF this is all they can see - the underside of the vehicle.
To see more of the orbiter you have to go up onto the work platforms. The ship is big and fits tightly, so you can only see pieces at a time.The hole in the picture below is where one of the Space Shuttle Main Engines (SSMEs) gets plugged into the orbiter. Each vehicle has 3 of them and uses the engines to get the shuttle into space. If you watch a launch on TV and they take a shot up close at ignition, you will see the 3 bell-shaped SSMEs light first, followed a few seconds later by the Solid Rocket Boosters (SRBs).

Walking around the platforms you can also see things like the payload bay, the tail, the nose, the windows, and the top of the wings.




I also took Myca past the entrance to the white room. The hole in the back is the hatch to get into Endeavour.
On my way out I thanked the guys at the operations desk for letting me take a look around and snapped a picture of the countdown until Endeavour rolls over to the VAB. The sign says OV-105. OV stands for "Orbiter Vehicle" and 105 is the number assigned to Endeavour. Discovery is 103 and Atlantis is 104.
Then one of the guys at the ops desk asked if there was a special reason for walking around that night. I showed him Myca and told him about my project. He radioed somebody and few minutes later I was walking down the hall to get a bunny suit. Myca and I were going inside Endeavour.Our guide, a very knowledgable man named Rich, spent about an hour talking with us and explaining everything from the launch computers to how the crew makes their food in space. We even got to help him check some work the technicians had just finished. It was really neat.
The hatch lets you in to the lower part of the crew area, called the middeck, and the ladders provide access to the flight deck, which is where the cockpit is. For a vehicle that seems so big it amazes me how little space seven astronauts have to live in while they're in orbit.
Here's Myca hanging out in Endeavour's "kitchen". It's no more than a corner of the middeck.
"Upstairs" in the cockpit she got to sit in the commander's seat. The commander is the leader of the crew and the one who actually flies the shuttle during the mission. The pilot has the job of assisting the commander, much like the co-pilot on an airplane.
We also checked out the controls used while in space for things like docking with the International Space Station (ISS).
This is looking down into the middeck from the flight deck. The ladder isn't needed in space because the astronauts can float between the two areas.
Back on the middeck is the tunnel that lets astronauts into the shuttle payload bay. For missions to the ISS there is a docking adapter connected on the other side that lets them move between the orbiter and the space station.
When the visit was done we took one more picture of Myca in the white room.
Rich also gave me a marker so I could put our names on the wall with others who have been inside the vehicle. The names range from astronauts and their family members to movie stars to employees who work on the vehicle.

Thanks for this visit go to Doug, Kevin, Rich, Russ, and a few people who talked with me as we wandered but whose names I never caught. They made this a much better stop than I had ever imagined.
EDIT: I have been asked if I can give a better explanation of the first two pictures and where the shuttle actually is in them.
The tricky thing with the OPF is that when the shuttle is in there, you can't really see it. The white structure is fixed in place and encloses the vehicle.
The first picture shows the only part of the platforms that move, which lets us roll the orbiter in and out of the bay. Imagine how an alligator's mouth would open if he were laying on his side instead of his belly. That's how these work; each half opens outward. This is what one of the halves looks like in the open position:
Since I don't work directly on the vehicle the only time I have been close to the stands while open with an orbiter inside was KSC family day last year. You should be able to recognize the tail and the holes for the three main engines.
Photo: TJ M.The second picture today was a shot of the enclosure from the front.
Overall the frame isn't much to look at, but it is pretty impressive when you consider that somebody had to design all of the equipment we use. Workstands are an important part of that - one I never gave thought to before I started at KSC. It's only in the few years since I hired on that I appreciate just how much goes into this program.
So hopefully that helped clear things up a bit. If not, let me know and I'll see if I can come up with a better way to explain. :)
Overall the frame isn't much to look at, but it is pretty impressive when you consider that somebody had to design all of the equipment we use. Workstands are an important part of that - one I never gave thought to before I started at KSC. It's only in the few years since I hired on that I appreciate just how much goes into this program.So hopefully that helped clear things up a bit. If not, let me know and I'll see if I can come up with a better way to explain. :)

4 comments:
Can you add arrows to some of the photos to point to the specific parts of the shuttle that you are talking about...I get confused sometimes knowing what I am looking at with all of the support structure surrounding the shuttle? Thanks!
Sure. Like what?
Great! In the first two pictures today, I can't tell which part is the shuttle. Thanks again!
I've edited the post because the explanation was getting a bit long for a comment. If it doesn't help, let me know and I'll try to come up with something else...
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