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ORION: NASA Denies Ares 1 in trouble
    Launch delayed, but not in danger of failing.
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NASA shot back Wednesday at recent news reports suggesting the Ares I rocket in development for the past three years is doomed to failure.

Although NASA officials did not mention any media outlet by name, they took issue with an Oct. 26 story in the Orlando Sentinel claiming that concerns that Ares I could crash into its launch tower under certain wind conditions were the latest setback threatening to undo the U.S. space agency's plans for returning to the Moon.

Doug Cooke, NASA's deputy associate administrator for exploration systems, was up-front about the motive behind Wednesday's Constellation program media teleconference.

"Some recent new reports about Ares have been inaccurate and draw false conclusions and could be avoided if we are given the opportunity to give the facts of the case," Cooke said.

Steve Cook, manager of the Ares project at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., acknowledged that the so-called launch vehicle drift mentioned in the newspaper report was discussed during the Ares I's preliminary design review that wrapped up in September as something that would have to be addressed. But Cook said that news reports had blown the issue out of proportion.

"First of all, launch vehicles experience lift-off drift primarily due to winds at the launch pad and it's a manageable phenomenon," Cook said. "In the very heavy wind conditions that we are designed to - 34 knots, which is significantly higher than what shuttle uses today – Ares I can use its built-in thrust vector controls to steer away from the pad tower ... or fly within reduced wind constraints more similar to those used today on the shuttle. Either one of those by themselves will avoid the issues we've got here."

The space shuttle is designed to launch in winds up to 19 knots, or roughly 22 mph (35 kph).

 

 

 

             

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