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posted by hubie on Tuesday April 04, @03:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the big-big-machines dept.

The space agency's Crawler Transporter 2 has officially broken the Guinness World Record for the heaviest self-powered vehicle:

NASA's Crawler Transporter 2 was originally designed to carry Saturn V rockets during the Apollo program nearly 60 years ago. The aging giant recently got a much-needed upgrade for supporting the Artemis SLS megarocket, beating its twin vehicle for a world record.

On Wednesday, Guinness World Records presented NASA teams at the Kennedy Space Center with a certificate confirming that, at a whopping 6.65 million pounds (3 million kilograms), Crawler Transporter 2 is the world's heaviest self-powered vehicle, NASA announced in a statement.

"Anyone with an interest in machinery can appreciate the engineering marvel that is the crawler transporter," Shawn Quinn, program manager of Exploration Ground Systems, said in the statement. [...]

"NASA's crawlers were incredible pieces of machinery when they were designed and built in the 1960s," John Giles, NASA's Crawler Element Operations manager, said in the statement. "And to think of the work they've accomplished for Apollo and shuttle and now Artemis throughout the last six decades makes them even more incredible."

Due to how heavy the Crawler Transport is, the vehicle essentially crawls its way to the launch pad. It takes about eight to 12 hours for the rocket-carrying vehicle to drive the 4.2 miles (6.7 kilometers) from the Vehicle Assembly Building to the launch pad, going at a slow and steady speed of one mile per hour (1.6 kilometers per hour). It could take you a shorter time to walk that distance by foot.

Here's a crawler-transporter fact sheet [pdf]


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  • (Score: 2) by Nuke on Tuesday April 04, @06:43PM

    by Nuke (3162) on Tuesday April 04, @06:43PM (#1299752)

    ... or units of mass, for pedants.

    How bizarre, we are told the weight in millions of pounds (and pick up trucks), and I can't even see a weight on that Guiness certificate close-up. Makes me wonder if NASA express interplanetery distances in inches.

    Also, FTFA:

    It takes about eight to 12 hours for the rocket-carrying vehicle to drive the 4.2 miles (6.7 kilometers) ... going at a slow and steady speed of one mile per hour (1.6 kilometers per hour). It could take you a shorter time to walk that distance by foot.

    8-12 hours for 4 miles is closer to 0.5 mph. OK they stop for coffee breaks and bumps in the road, but 1 mph on the straights. But could be quicker on foot? No shit Sherlock. Maybe that was written for an American audience but I think I could wriggle there on my back faster than that.

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