Houston, Texas — June 2012

JUNE 30, 2012, SEATTLE, WA — MEI Rigging & Crating announced today that the company was chosen to supply packaging and build crates to transport NASA’s Full Fuselage Trainer (FFT) Space Shuttle for its journey from Houston’s Johnson Space Center to Seattle’s Museum of Flight. The FFT was carefully wrapped, crated, and packed by MEI in 22 large sections and will be reassembled later by The Museum of Flight for permanent display.

Crew Compartment Fits into Super Guppy

Packaged by MEI Rigging & Crating, the 24-foot-long crew compartment of the space shuttle full-fuselage trainer, positioned inside a special cradle for travel, is loaded onto a NASA Super Guppy aircraft at Ellington Field near the Johnson Space Center in Houston on Friday morning for transport to the Seattle Museum of Flight.

Packaged by MEI Rigging & Crating, the 24-foot-long crew compartment of the space shuttle full-fuselage trainer, positioned inside a special cradle for travel, is loaded onto a NASA Super Guppy aircraft at Ellington Field near the Johnson Space Center in Houston on Friday morning for transport to the Seattle Museum of Flight. Video courtesy of NASA.

Project Facts

  • Full Name: Full Fuselage Train
  • Year Built: 1979
  • Place of Birth: NASA Technical Services Division
  • Retirement: 2012 at The Museum of Flight, Seattle
  • Dimensions: 24 ft. H x 18.6 ft. W x 122 ft. L
  • Vertical Stabilizer: 46 ft. H
  • Used for: Crew training, engineering evaluations, instructor certifications, astronaut candidate training and more!
  • Break it down: It took NASA 7 years to build the FFT Space Shuttle. It took less than one month to break it down for packing and crating.
  • Wrap it up: MEI used enough shrink-wrap to cover 3 basketball courts.
  • Size it up: The FFT Space Shuttle’s crew section is the same size as the Observation Deck of the Space Needle.
  • Pack it up: MEI Rigging & Crating worked enough man hours packing the FFT to travel to the moon & back three times.
  • Wooden it be nice: MEI used enough 2″x 6″ wooden boards, if lined end-to-end, they would stretch over one mile. The wood is expected to be recycled for other projects in Seattle. Over 300 pounds of nails were used to pack the FFT. This is equivalent to the weight of one modern space suit with life support. MEI used more than 60,000 staples to pack the FFT. Laid at end-to-end, they would stretch over 20 football fields.
  • About the shuttle trainer: The FFT is a full-scale mockup of the space shuttle orbiter — without the wings. It was used as a testbed for upgrades to the shuttle fleet and for astronaut training such as extra-vehicular activity (EVA) and emergency egress. Built at Johnson Space Center in the 1970s, it was the oldest mockup in the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility (SVMF). The FFT includes flight quality systems, such as a payload bay, lighting and closed-circuit TV (CCTV).

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