Shuttle Swap Click here to see this amazing image even larger. AP Photo/Craig Ruttle
Space Shuttle Enterprise was the property of the Smithsonian Institution for 27 years. The shuttle never went to space; instead, NASA used it for landing and launch-pad vibration tests. The end of the space shuttle program last year gave the Smithsonian the opportunity to get Discovery, a shuttle that actually earned its "space" moniker. Thus Enterprise came to its new home, New York City, in April, where 50 employees from NASA and aerospace company United Space Alliance spent eight hours separating the 165,000-pound shuttle from its modified Boeing 747 transport.
Workers undid three bolts, up to two inches in diameter, connecting the two craft and then attached a yellow sling to the shuttle. Two cranes helped finish the task. One lifted Enterprise while the 747 backed out; the other crane held the shuttle steady as it was lowered onto a trailer. In June a barge carried Enterprise up the Hudson River to its final destination, the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum.
Workers undid three bolts, up to two inches in diameter, connecting the two craft and then attached a yellow sling to the shuttle. Two cranes helped finish the task. One lifted Enterprise while the 747 backed out; the other crane held the shuttle steady as it was lowered onto a trailer. In June a barge carried Enterprise up the Hudson River to its final destination, the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum.
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