This Article is From Oct 21, 2017

Astronauts Spacewalk To Install New Camera On International Space Station

Two astronauts, Randy Bresnik and Joe Acaba, replaced a blown fuse and installed a new high definition camera on the starboard truss of the International Space Station.

Astronauts Spacewalk To Install New Camera On International Space Station

Randy Bresnik and Joe Acaba went on a spacewalk that lasted 6 hours and 49 minutes

Washington: Two NASA astronauts have successfully completed a spacewalk to install a new camera system outside the International Space Station. 

They replaced a blown fuse and installed a new high definition camera on the starboard truss of the station.

During the spacewalk, which lasted six hours and 49 minutes, the duo of Expedition 53 Commander Randy Bresnik and Joe Acaba, Flight Engineer at NASA, worked quickly and were able to complete several "get ahead" tasks, Melanie Whiting from NASA wrote in a blogpost.

Acaba greased the new end effector on the robotic arm of the Space Station.

Bresnik installed a new radiator grapple bar and completed prep work for one of two spare pump modules on separate stowage platforms to enable easier access for potential robotic replacement tasks in the future.
 
"He nearly finished prep work on the second, but that work will be completed by future spacewalkers," Whiting said.

This was the fifth spacewalk of Bresnik's career - 32 hours total spacewalking - and the third for Acaba - 19 hours and 46 minutes total spacewalking.

Space station crew members have conducted 205 spacewalks in support of assembly and maintenance of the orbiting laboratory. Spacewalkers have now spent a total of 53 days, six hours and 25 minutes working outside the station.
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