Final ML-2 tower module added as Artemis and SLS Block 1B receive a funding  reprieve
Date:
Thu, 17 Jul 2025 20:23:50 +0000
Description:
Mobile Launcher 2 (ML-2), the launch tower and platform to be used by the  Block The post Final ML-2 tower module added as Artemis and SLS Block 1B  receive a funding reprieve appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Mobile Launcher 2 (ML-2), the launch tower and platform to be used by the  Block 1B variant of the Space Launch System (SLS), recently had its tenth and  final tower module stacked on July 2. Module 10 will support the Orion crew  access arm and related systems, and its installation brings the ML-2 towers  height to 106 m. The overall ML-2 structure will be over 122 m tall and mass  over 5,600,000 kg. 
In other good news for the SLS and Artemis programs, Congress recently  approved additional funding to preserve the Artemis IV and V missions, 
thereby maintaining SLS Block 1B and the rationale for using ML-2, which is  only compatible with SLS vehicles from Block 1B forward. 
 NASA's Mobile Launcher 2 (ML-2), designed and built to support SLS Block 1B,  completed stacking earlier this morning with its 10th and final module being  lifted into place. 
Now at its full height, work will continue on ML-2's internals and umbilical  structures. 
 - pic.twitter.com/D9g3K00cnK 
 Max Evans (@_mgde_) July 2, 2025 
 
 
Although Module 10s installation on ML-2 is a significant achievement, the  structure is far from complete. ML-2 will host 11 umbilicals and 50  subsystems, and structures like the crew access arm still need to be added.  Some umbilicals and systems will support the Block 1Bs new Exploration Upper  Stage (EUS), replacing the shorter and narrower Delta IV-based Interim  Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) used for the first three Artemis missions. 
 See Also ML-2 Updates SLS Forum Section Click here to Join L2 
The current work-to-date for prime contractor Bechtel to deliver ML-2 to NASA  is November 2026, although NASAs Office of the Inspector General (OIG)  reported that it does not expect ML-2 to be delivered until August 2027. If  Bechtel manages to deliver ML-2 to NASA by November 2026, the company will be  eligible for a milestone fee payment that would not be available if it were  delivered afterward. 
If ML-2 is delivered in November 2026, its preparations could conflict with  preparations for Artemis IIIs launch. ML-2 and the Artemis III stack on ML-1  would need to utilize the same facilities for testing and launch activities,  specifically the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) and Launch Complex 39B  (LC-39B) at the Kennedy Space Center. The earlier baseline for completion was  September 2027. 
ML-2 construction was started in 2020, with an initial completion date of  2023. However, the COVID-19 pandemic and other issues led to several delays.  Even after ML-2 is delivered to NASA, additional work will be needed to  prepare the platform for operational launches. OIGs August 2024 report also  projects that ML-2 will not be ready for launches until the spring of 2029.  Rendering of a Block 1B SLS mounted on ML-2 at LC-39B. (Credit: NASA) 
Artemis IV, the first mission to use ML-2 and SLSs Block 1B variant, is  currently scheduled to fly in September 2028. Artemis IV will use the Block  1Bs added capability over the original Block 1 SLS to deliver the I-Hab  habitation module to the Gateway station in lunar orbit. The four astronauts  on that mission will also conduct the programs second crewed landing on the  lunar surface using SpaceXs Starship-based Human Landing System (HLS) lander. 
SLS Block 1B replaces the original SLS Block 1 ICPS upper stage with the EUS,  featuring four RL-10 engines, and a wider fairing for carrying heavy cargo.  The original Block 1 core and five-segment solid rocket boosters will still 
be used; however, the EUS will make the Block 1B taller, rendering it  incompatible with the Mobile Launcher 1 (ML-1) used for the first three  Artemis missions. 
Following Artemis IV is Artemis V  a human lunar landing mission, using Blue  Origins HLS lunar lander, that also will deliver the European Space Agencys  (ESA) ESPRIT refueling and communications module, a Canadian robotic arm, and  NASAs Lunar Terrain Vehicle rover to Gateway. Both missions were funded in 
the Trump Administrations big beautiful bill supplemental appropriation that  passed both houses of Congress this month before being signed into law by the  President. ML-2 next to a Shuttle-era mobile launch platform and the former  orbiter processing facility, now repurposed for Boeing Starliner. (Credit: 
Joe B for NSF) 
However, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which had  originally marked Artemis IV and V for cancellation, states that it has the  authority to decide how to spend the funds that Congress appropriates. There  is currently a news blackout from NASA regarding Artemis IV and V milestones  as a result. 
The OMB is also working on significant personnel cuts at NASA, which may  impact Artemis going forward. 2,000 senior managers at NASA may lose their  jobs before the end of the year, and the White House is considering  withholding funds from NASA for its payroll at years end as well. 
Other challenges to the Artemis IV and V schedules include possible delays to  the Starship-based HLS lander as a result of the recent explosion of Ship 36  at Starbases Masseys test site. There are also ongoing post-pandemic-related  supply chain issues affecting core stage production for both missions. The  completed Orion spacecraft for Artemis II. (Credit: Lockheed Martin) 
The Artemis II mission, the first crewed flight to the Moon since December  1972, is still being processed at the Kennedy Space Center. Exploration 
Ground Systems is loading commodities aboard Orion in the Multi-Payload  Processing Facility, and loading for a number of these commodities is  complete. 
Additional commodity loading will be performed in the VAB before the vehicle  is rolled out to the pad for launch. Artemis II stacking is scheduled for 
this fall, with the vehicle expected to be ready for rollout by the end of  this year. The Artemis II launch is currently scheduled for no earlier than  February 2026. 
In other Artemis news, Axiom Space recently tested its lunar spacesuit in 
pool facilities at NASAs Johnson Space Center, and a human-in-the-loop test 
in a vacuum chamber is scheduled for early 2026. This test must be completed  before the critical design review for the suit is finished, which is another  item on the critical path for Artemis lunar landings. A roll-out solar array  for the Gateway PPE module after successfully being unfurled. (Credit: 
Redwire Space) 
Work is also underway on the Gateways first two elements: the Power and  Propulsion Element (PPE) module and the Habitation And Logistics Outpost  (HALO) module. Redwire Space recently conducted a rollout test of one of the  two large solar arrays for the PPE module. 
The HALO module is now at the Northrop Grumman facility in Gilbert, Arizona,  and the work-to-date for delivery to Florida is October 2026, while the PPE  modules work-to-date for delivery is November 2026. The PPE and HALO modules  are scheduled to launch together on a Falcon Heavy in 2027. 
 (Lead image: ML-2 and the VAB at NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida.  Credit: Max Evans for NSF) 
 
The post Final ML-2 tower module added as Artemis and SLS Block 1B receive a  funding reprieve appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/07/ml-2-final-module/
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