NASA to roll its moon rocket back to the launchpad after repairs, aiming for April 1 liftoff

NASA plans to roll its huge moon rocket back to the launchpad at Florida’s Kennedy Space Center on Thursday evening, setting the stage for four astronauts’ much-anticipated journey around the moon.

The 322-foot-tall Space Launch System rocket, topped with the Orion capsule, will launch the crew on a 10-day trip as early as April 1. But first, the rocket and spacecraft must make a painstakingly slow, 4-mile trek from the hangar to the launchpad.

The journey is set to begin at 8 p.m. ET and will likely wrap up around 12 hours later.

It’s the second rollout process for the 11-million-pound rocket. It was first rolled to the launchpad in mid-January, but several weeks ago, engineers found a blockage in the flow of helium that required NASA to roll the rocket back to its Vehicle Assembly Building for repairs.

The vehicle’s return to the launchpad will involve a moving platform known as a crawler-transporter,

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