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Saturn IB / Saturn V Rocket Payload Planner's Guide (Paperback)
Loot Price: R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
You Save: R101
(17%)
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Saturn IB / Saturn V Rocket Payload Planner's Guide (Paperback)
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List price R604
Loot Price R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
You Save R101 (17%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Developments of America's first heavy lift space rocket Saturn I,
the Saturn IB and Saturn V propelled America's space program during
the Apollo and Skylab eras. First launched in 1966, Saturn IB
replaced the Saturn I's S-IV second stage with the more powerful
S-IVB. It could carry a partially fueled Apollo Command / Service
Module or fully fueled Lunar Module into low Earth orbit, allowing
critical testing of these systems to be conducted long before the
Saturn V was ready. It also flew one orbital mission without a
payload, with the extra fuel used to demonstrate that the S-IVB's
J-2 engine could be restarted in zero gravity - a critical
operation for translunar injection. The Saturn IB produced thrust
equivalent to 1.6 million pounds force, and could carry 46,000
pounds of payload to low Earth orbit. Saturn IB flew nine times,
including three Skylab missions and for the Apollo-Soyuz Test
Project. Saturn V was simply the heaviest, tallest, and most
powerful rocket ever built, and capable of carrying the heaviest
payload. First launched in 1967, the rocket consisted of three
stages, with the S-IVB serving as its third stage. Taller than the
Statue of Liberty, Saturn V had a mass of 3000 metric tons and five
F-1 engines capable of producing thrust thrust of 7.6 million
pounds-force. It could take payloads up to 100,000 pounds beyond
Earth orbit or 262,000 pounds into low Earth orbit. It flew
thirteen times, including eight times to the moon and (in a
two-stage version) on the Skylab I mission. Originally prepared by
the Missile and Space Systems Division of NASA contractor Douglas
Aircraft, this book was created to acquaint payload planners with
the capabilities of the Saturn IB and Saturn V rockets. It shows
methods by which Saturn vehicles can accommodate payloads of
various weights and volumes for different missions, and methods by
which they might be modified to allow even greater performance.
It's a wonderful reference for the museum docent, researcher, or
anyone who ever wondered how these mighty rockets were designed and
built.
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