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Artemis II Moon Mission
2APR

Second toilet fault reported on Day 3

1 min read
11:46UTC

Koch reported a burning smell from the toilet hygiene bay, the second separate toilet anomaly in 72 hours.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

Second toilet anomaly since launch; cleared as non-critical.

Mission Specialist Christina Koch reported a burning smell from the toilet hygiene bay on the night of Day 3, resembling "an old electric heater switching on." Flight controllers suspected orange insulation on the hygiene bay door and cleared the system for continued use. The toilet has now generated two separate anomaly reports since launch, distinct from the Day 1 fan fault .

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The toilet on Orion is not optional equipment. In deep space, a functioning waste management system is mission-critical: there is no alternative and no way to repair or replace it from outside the spacecraft. Two separate faults since launch, both cleared by ground teams, mean the system is working but has generated more anomaly reports than NASA publicly anticipated.\n\nNeither fault threatened the mission. Both produced data about how the system performs in the actual deep-space environment, which is harder to replicate on the ground than almost any other system test.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Orion waste management system was tested extensively at NASA's Johnson Space Center, but thermal and vacuum conditions in translunar space differ from ground-based test chambers in ways that affect seals, fans, and insulation materials. The burning smell consistent with heat-activated insulation is a known failure mode in enclosed electrical systems exposed to temperature cycling.

NASA's anomaly log for crewed missions records all fault lights, creating a reliability dataset that informs refurbishment protocols for Artemis III. Two toilet anomalies in 72 hours will register as a priority for hardware engineers reviewing the post-mission data.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Two separate toilet system anomalies in 72 hours will flag the waste management system for priority hardware review before Artemis III.

First Reported In

Update #3 · G3 storm hits crew; NASA stays silent

NASA· 4 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
ESA
ESA
The European Service Module has operated without anomaly for five consecutive days, with the OMS-E engine's translunar injection precision directly responsible for eliminating both correction burns. ESA's hardware contribution is the mission's highest-performing subsystem.
NASA
NASA
NASA cancelled a second consecutive outbound correction burn and confirmed Orion in lunar gravitational dominance, while declining to publish any crew radiation dose data through a complete G3 storm cycle. Bipartisan congressional rejection of its $18.8 billion FY2027 budget proposal means the agency faces a political fight even as its spacecraft performs above expectations.
Dual-framework nations
Dual-framework nations
Signing both the Artemis Accords and the ILRS framework is rational hedging, not defection; smaller nations maximise access without exclusive commitment. Lunar governance is genuinely multipolar, and the US coalition count of 61 overstates exclusivity.
Boeing / Northrop Grumman
Boeing / Northrop Grumman
SLS component production spans more than 40 US states, giving the industrial base strong political protection regardless of commercial alternatives. Congressional mandates guarantee contracts through FY2029, insulating the supply chain from technical programme changes.
NASA Office of Inspector General
NASA Office of Inspector General
The IRB heat shield findings should have been published before launch. The Starship HLS is two years behind schedule with a worsening manual control dispute. NASA has no crew rescue capability for lunar surface operations. The programme is proceeding with documented, unresolved risks.
SpaceX
SpaceX
Starship HLS development is ongoing. SpaceX disputes the characterisation of the manual crew control requirement as unresolved, maintaining its autonomous landing architecture meets mission safety objectives. The company has not publicly responded to the OIG's worsening-trend characterisation.