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It was all over in six minutes. "Think about what we just did. Our first flight test and the only thing we're waiting on was weather," launch director Ed Mango told his team. NASA contends the Ares I will be ready to carry astronauts to the International Space Station in 2015, four to five years after the shuttles are retired. But a panel of experts said in a report to President Barack Obama last week that it will be more like 2017, and stressed that the entire effort is underfunded. The first Ares moon trip would be years beyond that under the current plan. No matter what direction the Obama administration takes, NASA managers expect to learn a lot from Wednesday's experimental flight, even if it's for another type of rocket. They said they already have learned a lot. Hanley, for one, does not want to hear anymore about the cloudy, electrically charged conditions
-- triboelectrification -- that made it so difficult to get this test rocket off the ground. Future rockets will have proper protection. "Whatever we end up flying, this will not be a problem," he promised. ___ On the Net:
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