Astronauts spacewalk to repair int’l station

Astronauts spacewalk to repair int’l station

WASHINGTON
Astronauts spacewalk to repair int’l station

Two American astronauts completed a lengthy spacewalk on March 29 to replace old hoses on the International Space Station’s cooling system and make other equipment upgrades, footage from the U.S. space agency NASA showed.

The walk - which lasted six hours and 10 minutes - by flight engineers Drew Feustel and Ricky Arnold got off to a delayed start at 1333 GMT because leak checks for one of the astronaut’s space suits took longer than expected, a NASA TV commentator said.

But once outside of the space station, the astronauts worked methodically and without incident to install wireless communications antennas, swap out the cooling system hoses and replace a broken video camera with a new one.

The hoses are suspected as a possible cause of an ammonia leak from the space station’s cooling system.

It was Feustel’s seventh spacewalk and Arnold’s third.

The astronauts are recent additions to the crew of the orbiting space station, arriving on March 23 with Russian crewmate Oleg Artemyev aboard a Soyuz spacecraft.