The test series wrapped up yesterday with a seventh hot fire test of a developmental RS-25 engine on the A-1 Test Stand at NASA's Stennis Space Centre in Bay St Louis, Mississippi. The test ran for a full-duration 535 seconds.
"The completion of this test series is an important step in getting SLS ready for the journey to Mars," said Steve Wofford, engines manager at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Centre in Huntsville, Alabama, where the Space Launch System (SLS) Programme is managed for the agency.
The series was designed to collect valuable data on performance of the RS-25 engine, a former space shuttle main engine operating at higher thrust levels in order to provide the power needed for the SLS vehicle.
Of particular interest is data that will aid in development of a new engine controller, or "brain," to monitor engine status and communicate programmed performance needs.
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Four RS-25 engines will help power the SLS core stage during launch. Firing simultaneously at 109 per cent of its operating level, the engines will provide approximately 2 million pounds of thrust.
The engines will operate in conjunction with a pair of five-segment solid rocket boosters for a total of 8.4 million pounds of thrust to lift the initial 70-metric-tonne SLS off the launch pad.
Testing of RS-25 flight engines for the initial SLS missions will begin at Stennis this fall. In addition to testing RS-25 flight engines, Stennis operators will employ their collective expertise to test the SLS core stage.
The B-2 Test Stand at Stennis is being renovated to conduct tests on the SLS flight core stage prior to its first uncrewed mission.
That testing will involve installing the flight stage on the stand and firing its four RS-25 engines simultaneously, just as during an actual launch.