Assembly, Cable Cutter, Skylab. Creator: A.B. Chance Company.

Assembly, Cable Cutter, Skylab. Creator: A.B. Chance Company.

2-839-671 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

When Skylab was launched in May 1973, one of the solar arrays ripped off during launch and the other became jammed under a metal strap. The crew arrived at Skylab 11 days later, ready to free and extend the stuck solar array so it could produce electrical power for the space station. NASA had quickly gathered some tools for the astronauts to use to solve the unexpected problem. This cable cutter is a standard linesman's tool that was slightly modified for the task in space. It was probably used before the crew's launch to develop and practice procedures for cutting the metal strap to release the jammed solar array. The first Skylab crew carried such a cable cutter into orbit and used it successfully during an extravehicular activity or "spacewalk" to make the repair. Transferred from NASA to the Museum in 1973.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. A.B. Chance Company, attributed to: American: Maker, manufacturer

Medium
  1. Aluminum, steel, plastic, fabric cord

Picture Type
  1. Equipment-tools
  2. Object

Category Hierarchy

Science & Nature Technology & Innovation


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 4950x6600
File Size : 95,713kb


Aliases

  1. A19740007000
  1. NASM-A19740007000-NASM2014-05414-000001.txt
  1. 0990010255
  1. 2-839-671
  1. 2839671
  1. A19740007000

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