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Astronauts remove explosive bolt in risky spacewalk

Similar bolts on Soyuz spacecraft are suspected of failing to fire during atmospheric re-entry, causing bumpy landings

Two spacewalking cosmonauts delicately removed an explosive bolt from their Soyuz capsule on Thursday in hopes engineers can figure out why two previous crews landed hard and off course.

The bolt, which has the explosive capability of an M-80 firework, is one of 10 that separate the Soyuz鈥檚 crew module from an equipment compartment before entry into Earth鈥檚 atmosphere.

Russian engineers suspect a bad bolt delayed the compartment鈥檚 jettison during landings in October 2007 and April 2008, leading to steep and fast descents and hard slams into the ground.

The bolt removed by cosmonauts Sergei Volkov and Oleg Kononenko was sealed inside a blast-proof canister and will be returned home aboard the Soyuz when the crew completes its mission in October.

Despite assurances the bolt could not detonate in the cosmonauts鈥 hands, flight controllers repeatedly cautioned the men to move slowly and carefully.

鈥淭ake your time,鈥 Mission Control, speaking through a translator, told the spacewalkers.

Blast proof

It took four hours for Volkov and Kononenko to position themselves at the Soyuz, cut through insulation and open a locking mechanism to free one of the bolts.

Finally, at 1844 EDT (2244 GMT), Volkov handed the device to Kononenko, who was standing by with a stainless-steel, blast-proof canister.

鈥淚t is in,鈥 one of the cosmonauts said. 鈥淭hank God.鈥

The six-hour,18-minute outing was the first for both Volkov, the station鈥檚 commander and Kononenko, the lead flight engineer, both of whom flew to the outpost in April

Their crewmate, NASA astronaut Greg Chamitoff, who joined them last month, was inside the Soyuz during the spacewalk to avoid being cut off from an escape route to the ship should a problem arise.

Chamitoff will return to the Soyuz again on Tuesday while his crewmates make a second spacewalk to prepare the station for another docking port. Next year, the station鈥檚 crew size is expected to double from three to six, meaning a second Soyuz will need to be parked at the outpost so everyone has a ride back to Earth. A Soyuz can hold three people.