 Space-by-appounts full for STLB. Yes, we just want to confirm that STLB is configured through the VIU for VAS-10 and not the camcorder over. Okay, and while you have you I'd like to make a note to your AGHF IFM-01. When you have that in front of you, I'm ready to read up to you. Over. We have message 61, AGHF IFM-04 in hand. And, uh, Tom, it's AGHF IFM-01 on page I-3 of the AGHF book. Over. If the sun's over, read you loud and clear. How me? Inputting can move the color bar up and down the scale of the screen's frozen. It's not moving through the rest of the test. Copy, Rick. Goodbye. Rick, we have the suggestion to answer the test and redo it. Roger that, rookie. You want me to cancel this maintain constant torque test and repeat the whole maintain constant torque test in the protocol again. Is that true? That's affirmative. This is Huntsville Space Lab Mission Operations Control in Huntsville, continuing to receive live downlink from orbit of Columbia. And as I stated earlier, this is payload specialist John Jacques Favier and pilot Kevin Kregel in our view now. We're currently working on activities involving the bubble drop and particle unit. What the two are doing this afternoon is installing a high voltage power supply that will be used in a run that it will be coming up in a few days. However, this particular activity does require some amount of time, so it was pre-scheduled a few days ahead of that particular sample so that everything could be set up and arranged and be ready for that run to take place. And as we can see, the activity is once again beginning to pick up in the Space Lab module. Crew members having just finished the lunch portion of their day, that marking pretty much the midway point of the day's activities. And once again, activities are resuming today at fairly steady pace after the crew enjoyed a half day off during yesterday's flight day activities. And once again, today's activities, this afternoon's activities, will consist of tests being run on the torque velocity dynamometer, on the torso rotation experiment, the astronaut lung function experiment, as well as the bubble drop and particle unit activities that we are currently watching now. Once again, this is live video that is coming from orbit of Columbia. And at a mission to lapse time of six days one hour and 58 minutes, this is Space Lab Mission Operations Control.