Here are some images of AMT/Round 2 Model's 1/200 scale Man in Space rocket series from the Mercury Redstone up to the Saturn V.
The
stand did not come with the kit. I built it from disused model parts
and the signage I made from my printer. The kit also comes with a paper
model launch tower and base but I never bothered using it as I felt it
was to cheap looking.
From Wikipedia"
Mercury Redstone:
NASA chose the
U.S. Army's Redstone
liquid-fueled ballistic missile for its sub-orbital flights because it was the most reliable of any U.S. ballistic missile at the time,
with many successful test flights.
The standard military Redstone lacked sufficient thrust to lift a
Mercury capsule into the ballistic sub-orbital trajectory needed for the
project;
however, the first stage of the
Jupiter-C,
which was a modified Redstone with lengthened fuel tanks, could carry
enough propellant to reach the desired trajectory. Therefore this
Jupiter-C first stage was used as the starting point for the
Mercury-Redstone design.
The Jupiter-C's engine, however, was being phased out by the Army, so
to avoid potential complications such as parts shortages or design
revisions, the Mercury-Redstone designers chose the
Rocketdyne A-7 engine used on the latest military Redstones.
The standard Redstone was fueled with a 75 percent
ethyl alcohol solution, but the Jupiter-C first stage had used
hydyne fuel, a blend of 60 percent
unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) and 40 percent
diethylenetriamine (DETA)
This was a more powerful fuel than ethyl alcohol, but it was also more toxic,
which could be dangerous for an astronaut in a launch pad emergency.
Furthermore, hydyne had never been used with the new A-7 engine.
The Mercury-Redstone designers rejected hydyne and returned to the standard ethyl alcohol fuel.
The most important change in making the Mercury-Redstone a suitable
vehicle for an astronaut was the addition of an automatic in-flight
abort sensing system.
In an emergency where the rocket was about to suffer a catastrophic failure, an abort would activate the
launch escape system
attached to the Mercury capsule, which would rapidly eject it from the
booster. Either the astronaut or the ground controllers could initiate
an abort manually,
but some potential failures during flight could lead to disaster before an abort could be manually triggered.
The Mercury-Redstone's automatic in-flight abort sensing system
solved this problem by monitoring the rocket's performance during
flight. If it detected an anomaly which might threaten the astronaut,
such as loss of flight control, engine thrust, or electrical power, it
would automatically abort, shutting down the engine and activating the
capsule's escape system.
(To keep the rocket from falling on people or facilities in the launch
area, automatic engine shutdown was disabled during the first 30 seconds
of flight, while the rocket was still over land.)
Mercury Atlas D:
Nine LV-3Bs were launched, two on unmanned suborbital test flights, three on unmanned orbital test flights, and four with
manned Mercury spacecraft.
In addition to the maiden flight, the first orbital launch,
Mercury-Atlas 3
also failed. This failure was due to a problem with the guidance system
failing to execute pitch and roll commands, necessitating that the
Range Safety Officer destroy the vehicle. The spacecraft separated by means of its
launch escape system and was recovered 1.8 kilometres (1.1 mi) from the launch pad.
Atlas LV-3B launches were conducted from
Launch Complex 14 at the
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.
A further series of Mercury launches were planned, which would have
used additional LV-3Bs; however these flights were canceled after the
success of the initial Mercury missions.
The last LV-3B launch was conducted on 15 May 1963.
Gemini Titan:
Project Gemini was the second
human spaceflight program of
NASA, the civilian space agency of the
United States government. Project Gemini was conducted between projects
Mercury and
Apollo, with ten manned flights occurring in 1965 and 1966.
Gemini was designed by a Canadian,
Jim Chamberlin, formerly the chief
aerodynamicist on the
Avro Arrow
fighter interceptor program with Avro Canada. Chamberlin joined NASA
along with 25 senior Avro engineers after cancellation of the Arrow
program, and became head of the U.S. Space Task Group’s engineering
division in charge of Gemini. The prime contractor was
McDonnell Aircraft, which had also been the prime contractor for the
Project Mercury capsule.
In addition,
astronaut Gus Grissom was heavily involved in the development and design of the
Gemini spacecraft. He writes in his posthumous 1968 book
Gemini! that the realization of
Project Mercury's
end and the unlikelihood of his having another flight in that program
prompted him to focus all of his efforts on the upcoming Gemini Program.
The Gemini program was managed by the Manned Spacecraft Center,
Houston, Texas, under direction of the Office of Manned Space Flight,
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C, Dr.
George E. Mueller,
Associate Administrator of NASA for Manned Space Flight, served as
acting director of the Gemini program. William C. Schneider, Deputy
Director of Manned Space Flight for Mission Operations, served as
mission director on all Gemini flights beginning with Gemini VI.
Guenther Wendt
was a McDonnell engineer who supervised launch preparations for both
the Mercury and Gemini programs and would go on to do the same for the
manned section of the Apollo program. His team was responsible for
completion of the complex pad close-out procedures just prior to
spacecraft launch, and he personally closed the hatches before flight.
The astronauts appreciated his taking absolute authority over, and
responsibility for, the condition of the spacecraft and developed a
good-humored rapport with him.
The Gemini-
Titan launch vehicles, like the Mercury-
Atlas
vehicles before them, were ordered by NASA through the U. S. Air Force
and were in reality missiles. The Gemini-Titan II rockets were assigned
U.S. Air Force serial numbers, which were painted in four places on each
Titan II (on opposite sides on each of the first and second stages).
U.S. Air Force crews maintained Launch Complex 19 and prepared and
launched all of the Gemini-Titan II launch vehicles.
The USAF serial numbers assigned to the Gemini-Titan launch vehicles
are given in the tables above. Fifteen Titan IIs were ordered in 1962 so
the serial is "62-12XXX", but only "12XXX" is painted on the Titan II.
The order for the last three of the 15 launch vehicles was cancelled on
July 30, 1964, and they were never built. Serial numbers were, however,
assigned to them prospectively: 12568 - GLV-13; 12569 - GLV-14; and 12570 - GLV-15.
Saturn 1B:
By sharing the S-IVB upper stage, the Saturn IB and Saturn V provided
a common interface to the Apollo spacecraft. The only major difference
was that the S-IVB on the Saturn V burned only part of its propellant to
achieve earth orbit, so it could be restarted for
translunar injection. The S-IVB on the Saturn IB needed all of its propellant to achieve earth orbit.
The Saturn IB launched two unmanned CSM suborbital flights, one
unmanned LM orbital flight, and the first manned CSM orbital mission
(first planned as
Apollo 1, later flown as
Apollo 7). It also launched one orbital mission,
AS-203, without a payload so the S-IVB would have residual
liquid hydrogen
fuel. This mission supported the design of the restartable version of
the S-IVB used in the Saturn V, by observing the behavior of the liquid
hydrogen in
weightlessness.
In 1973, the year after the Apollo lunar program ended, three Apollo CSM/Saturn IBs ferried crews to the
Skylab space station. In 1975, one last Apollo/Saturn IB launched the Apollo portion of the joint US-
USSR Apollo Soyuz Test Project. A backup Apollo CSM/Saturn IB was assembled and made ready for a Skylab rescue mission but never flown.
Saturn V:
The largest production model of the
Saturn family of rockets, the Saturn V was designed under the direction of
Wernher von Braun and
Arthur Rudolph at the
Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama, with
Boeing,
North American Aviation,
Douglas Aircraft Company, and
IBM as the lead contractors. Von Braun's design was based in part on his work on the
Aggregate series of rockets, especially the A-10, A-11, and A-12, in Germany during World War II.
To date, the Saturn V is the only launch vehicle to transport human beings beyond
low Earth orbit. A
total of 24 astronauts were launched to the Moon, three of them more than once, in the four years spanning December 1968 through December 1972.
The Saturn V's size and payload capacity dwarfed all other previous
rockets which had successfully flown at that time. With the Apollo
spacecraft on top it stood 363 feet (111 m) tall and without fins it was
33 feet (10 m) in diameter. Fully fueled it had a total mass of 6.5
million pounds (3,000 metric tons) and a payload capacity of 260,000
pounds (120,000 kg) to
LEO. Comparatively, at 363 feet (111 m), the Saturn V is about 58 feet taller than the
Statue of liberty from the ground to the torch, and is just one foot shorter than
St Paul's Cathedral in London, and only cleared the doors of the
Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at
Kennedy Space Center by 6 feet (1.8 m) when rolled out.
In contrast, the
Mercury-Redstone Launch Vehicle used on
Freedom 7, the first manned American spaceflight, was just under 11 feet (3.4 m) longer than the
S-IVB stage, and delivered less sea level thrust (78,000 pounds-force (350 kN)) than the
Launch Escape System rocket (147,000 pounds-force (650 kN) sea level thrust) mounted atop the Apollo command module.
The Saturn V was principally designed by the
Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama, although numerous major systems, including propulsion, were designed by subcontractors. It used the powerful new
F-1 and
J-2 rocket engines for propulsion. When tested, these engines shattered the windows of nearby houses.
Designers decided early on to attempt to use as much technology from the Saturn I program as possible. Consequently, the
S-IVB-500 third stage of the Saturn V was based on the S-IVB-200 second stage of the
Saturn IB. The
Instrument Unit that controlled the Saturn V shared characteristics with that carried by the Saturn IB.
Blueprints and other Saturn V plans are available on
microfilm at the Marshall Space Flight Center.
The Saturn V's size and payload capacity dwarfed all other previous
rockets which had successfully flown at that time. With the Apollo
spacecraft on top it stood 363 feet (111 m) tall and without fins it was
33 feet (10 m) in diameter. Fully fueled it had a total mass of 6.5
million pounds (3,000 metric tons) and a payload capacity of 260,000
pounds (120,000 kg) to
LEO. Comparatively, at 363 feet (111 m), the Saturn V is about 58 feet taller than the
Statue of liberty from the ground to the torch, and is just one foot shorter than
St Paul's Cathedral in London, and only cleared the doors of the
Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at
Kennedy Space Center by 6 feet (1.8 m) when rolled out.
In contrast, the
Mercury-Redstone Launch Vehicle used on
Freedom 7, the first manned American spaceflight, was just under 11 feet (3.4 m) longer than the
S-IVB stage, and delivered less sea level thrust (78,000 pounds-force (350 kN)) than the
Launch Escape System rocket (147,000 pounds-force (650 kN) sea level thrust) mounted atop the Apollo command module.
The Saturn V was principally designed by the
Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama, although numerous major systems, including propulsion, were designed by subcontractors. It used the powerful new
F-1 and
J-2 rocket engines for propulsion. When tested, these engines shattered the windows of nearby houses.
Designers decided early on to attempt to use as much technology from the Saturn I program as possible. Consequently, the
S-IVB-500 third stage of the Saturn V was based on the S-IVB-200 second stage of the
Saturn IB. The
Instrument Unit that controlled the Saturn V shared characteristics with that carried by the Saturn IB.
Blueprints and other Saturn V plans are available on
microfilm at the Marshall Space Flight Center.