2 parachutes malfunctioned in NASA test flight
By MARCIA DUNN
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Two of three parachutes
malfunctioned in the test flight of a prototype moon rocket earlier
this week, causing major damage to the booster, NASA said Friday.
The problem caused the Ares I-X booster to slam into the
Atlantic Ocean harder than expected. The booster was badly dented
by the impact.
Mission manager Bob Ess said Friday the damage is irrelevant
because the booster is not meant to fly again. The parachute
trouble does not detract from the overall success of Wednesday's
flight, he said.
``Don't play this too much,'' Ess urged reporters. ``The
parachute thing was like 'Hey, look at that.' We're not worried
about that. There's no investigation. There's no unusual thing
we're doing. We're just going through our usual post (flight)
tests.''
All three parachutes on the first-stage booster opened following
the two-minute flight. One quickly deflated. Another deployed only
part way.
The booster, in essence, was brought down by the equivalent of
1 1/2 parachutes.
Ess said the parachute lines may be to blame, but engineers
won't know for sure until the parts are inspected early next week.
The recovered booster arrived back at port Friday.
The $445 million flight test was the first step in NASA's effort
to return astronauts to the moon. The White House may change
direction, however, and scrap the Ares I in favor of other rockets
and destinations.
Initial indications are that the rocket was ``rock solid''
during liftoff, with no worrisome shaking from all the thrust, Ess
said. There was concern a year ago, among some, that the launch
vibrations could be violent.
The definitive word, Ess said, will come once engineers get the
data recorder back and conduct weeks of analysis.
On the Net:
NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/aresIX
10/30/09 13:21
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