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Published: November 24, 2008
HOUSTON - Astronauts tinkered Sunday with a troublesome piece of equipment that can convert urine and sweat into drinkable water once it's functioning and that will allow the International Space Station to grow to six crew members.
Station commander Michael Fincke and Endeavour astronaut Donald Pettit changed how a centrifuge is set up in the $154 million water recycling system. The centrifuge is on mounts and Mission Control asked Fincke to remove them and bolt it down without them.
The astronauts have been working for the past three days to get the system running so it can generate samples for testing back on Earth, but the urine processor only operates for two hours at a time before shutting down.
Lead flight director Ginger Kerrick said engineers hope the problem is fixed, but they were studying whether six crew members would be able to live at the space station with the urine processor only working for two hours at a time. The crew is scheduled to grow from three to six next year.
"If this is as good as it's going to get, we do need to be able to answer that question," Kerrick said.
Flight controllers had hoped the water samples brought back for testing had a mixture in which 70 percent came from condensation and 30 percent came from urine. Given the problems with the urine processor, that ratio stands at 90 percent condensation and 10 percent urine. Crew members won't be able to use the processor until several rounds of tests show it is safe.
Mission managers have decided not to extend the mission by an extra day because the astronauts have obtained enough water samples, Kerrick said. Endeavour is scheduled to undock from the space station on Thanksgiving Day.
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