Juno V

The Juno V series of rockets were a design that was proposed in the late 1950s but cancelled. The rockets were multi-stage and, although they failed to reach production, their sections were used in other designs.[1] The Juno V was an eight-engine cluster concept,[2] requiring second and third stages to make a complete booster.[3] Depending on the stages added, the rocket would either be a Juno V-A or a Juno V-B.[4][5]
Juno V-A
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Juno V-A was studied in 1958, as a new name for the Super-Jupiter rocket. Super-Jupiter planned on using four Rocketdyne E-1 engines in its second stage, but this project was cancelled so V-A would use the S-I first stage to propel it into space and a whole Titan I ICBM to continue the journey.[4] Juno V-A was never developed, but all its stages were used on different launch vehicles, now retired as of today.
Juno V-B
[edit]Juno V-B, studied in the same year as Juno V-A, was proposed for lunar and interplanetary missions into space. It was just like the Juno V-A, except the third stage, originally the second stage of a Titan I booster, would be replaced with a Centaur C high-energy third stage.[5] A year after Juno V-B's study, the booster received a new name: the Saturn A-1, which, like the Juno series of rockets was never built in its original planned form, but all its stages were used on different launch vehicles.
References
[edit]- ^ Koelle, H. H. (Heinz Hermann) (1958-11-15). "Juno V Space Vehicle Development Program". Saturn V Collection. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
- ^ "Rocket Engine, Liquid Fuel, H-1 | National Air and Space Museum". airandspace.si.edu. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
- ^ Bilstein, Roger E. (1980). Stages to Saturn (PDF). NASA. p. 36. ISBN 0-16-048909-1.
- ^ a b "Juno V-A". www.astronautix.com. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
- ^ a b "Juno V-B". www.astronautix.com. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
External links
[edit]- Bilstein, Roger E, Stages to Saturn, US Government Printing Office, 1980.
- Lowther, Scott, Saturn: Development, Details, Derivatives and Descendants