Astronauts finish second spacewalk outside station
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Shuttle Endeavour astronauts working outside the orbiting International Space Station faced glitches during a second spacewalk on Thursday, as one astronaut experienced high carbon-dioxide levels after his crew mate lost a tool bag on the mission's first spacewalk.
Lead spacewalker Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper and rookie astronaut Shane Kimbrough returned to the space station's Quest airlock at 7:43 p.m. EST (0043 GMT) after a 6-hour, 45-minute outing.
The astronauts' main job was to work on one of the space station's two rotary joints, which are needed to pivot solar wing panels to face the sun for power.
The astronauts had to share grease guns and other tools after Stefanyshyn-Piper's tool kit, which contained $100,000 worth of gear, floated away on Tuesday.
During Thursday's spacewalk, levels of carbon dioxide levels in Kimbrough's space suit rose above NASA's safety limit, prompting controllers to order him back to the airlock just as the spacewalk was ending.
"It didn't represent a drastic change to our plan," said John Ray, NASA's lead spacewalk officer. Kimbrough was not in any danger and did not report any adverse symptoms, Ray said.
It was the second of four spacewalks planned for the 15-day mission, which had to be reorganized after Stefanyshyn-Piper lost the grease gun.
During Thursday's spacewalk, she used pre-lubricated wipes to trap metal particles, and Kimbrough used the one remaining grease gun to work on the station's robot arm. Continued...





