<font color="yellow">"but decided to let MMorris do that...... "</font><br /><br />Nope -- I still consider this to be a moot point -- there isn't a CM to be used. However, I will post part of a blog on of the landing of STS-121 for the forty minutes following the DO burn:<br /><br /><i>8:10 a.m. - Deorbit burn has been completed. During the burn Discovery was flying upside down and backwards. The shuttle is now committed to landing today. <br /><br />8:16 a.m. - The orbiter is beginning to feel the effects of the atmosphere. The crew was just given the go to begin dumping the excess propellants from the shuttle's forward maneuvering thrusters. <br /><br />8:22 a.m. - Shuttle Discovery is about 400,000 feet high and 52 minutes from touchdown at Kennedy Space Center. In about 20 minutes the ship will encounter the period of re-entry known as "entry interface." At this point, Discovery will be 80 miles in altitude and 5,000 miles from the runway. <br /><br />8:33 a.m. - Discovery is ten minutes from the start of entry interface. At that point, the ship and its crew will begin to experience increasing drag and friction as the shuttle races into the ever-thickening atmosphere. <br /><br />8:43 a.m. - As Discovery begins entry interface the orbiter is about 31 minutes from touchdown at Kennedy Space Center. At this time the orbiter's protective tiles are being exposed to extreme heat as Discovery enters the top fringes of the atmosphere. Discovery is now 4,600 miles to the runway, traveling at approximately mach 24.8. <br /><br />8:50 a.m. - Discovery has three good APUs and is heading toward the Yucatan Peninsula, on its way home to Florida. Speed is Mach 24.3. Mission control is considering a possible last minute redirect to Runway 15 due to some showers popping up around the Kennedy landing field. </i><br /><br />Perhaps the fact that the shuttle starts hitting atmophere six minutes after the completion of the DO burn has something to do with why the CM-based escape boat