NASA hauls repaired moon rocket from hangar back to pad for early April launch

The NASA Artemis II rocket with the Orion spacecraft aboard leaves the Vehicle Assembly Building, moving slowly to pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Friday.

The NASA Artemis II rocket with the Orion spacecraft aboard leaves the Vehicle Assembly Building, moving slowly to pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Friday. (Terry Renna, Associated Press)


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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — For the second time this year, NASA moved its moon rocket from the hangar to the pad on Friday in hopes of launching four astronauts on a lunar fly-around next month.

If the latest repairs work and everything else goes NASA's way, the Space Launch System could blast off as early as April 1 from Florida's Kennedy Space Center. The Artemis II crew went into quarantine this week in Houston.

The 322-foot rocket began the slow 4-mile trek in the middle of the night, transported atop a massive crawler used since the 1960s Apollo era. The trip was held up for several hours by high winds, but was completed by midday, 11 hours after it began.

The three Americans and one Canadian will zip around the moon in their capsule and then come straight home without stopping. Their mission should have been completed by now, but hydrogen fuel leaks and clogged helium lines forced two months of delay.

While technicians plugged the leaks at the pad, the helium issue could only be fixed in the Vehicle Assembly Building, forcing NASA to roll the rocket back at the end of February.

The last time NASA sent astronauts to the moon was during Apollo 17 in 1972. The new Artemis program aims for a two-person landing in 2028.

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Marcia Dunn

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