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I can find information on the fuels and motors etc but nothing to tell me what that beautiful, white shell that surrounds it all was made of. Fancy alloy? Titanium? Steel? Aluminum? Does anybody know?
Thanks

2007-09-11 01:57:16 · 13 answers · asked by phaphamo 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

13 answers

The vast majority of the rocket was made of aluminium and alloys of aluminium, for lightness and ease of manufacture, as well as structural rigidity (aluminium has the distinction of being one of the few materials to get stronger when exposed to very low temperatures such as that of the liquid oxygen and hydrogen used in the rocket, without getting brittle).

2007-09-11 03:29:06 · answer #1 · answered by Jason T 7 · 0 0

Took some finding, however here you go.

Forward Skirt Assembly
The extreme top of the body, ring-shaped part to connect IU is Forward Skirt Assembly. This is made from aluminum, and equipped with the environmental conditioning system which cools various an electronic machine, an antenna and them.

Propellant Tank Assembly
It is a fuel tank, the center of the body is greatly occupied. The top of about 3/4 is the LH2 (Liquid Hydrogen) tank, and the remainder, about 1/4 of bottom part is the LOX (Liquid Oxygen) tank. And, eight circle helium tanks are being installed inside the LH2 tank, for apply pressure to push the fuel out to engines. This tank is made of aluminum alloy, and waffle pattern was cutting down in inside for weight reduction and strength reinforcement.

2007-09-11 02:47:51 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The skin and load structures of the Saturn V were made completely of aluminum. Titanium alloys were too new, too hard to machine and too expensive to even consider. Not to mention most of the world's titanium at the time was mined in the Soviet Union!

2007-09-11 02:23:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The majority of the construction of the Saturn V shell was aluminum and aluminum alloys for weight savings. The interior structure of each stage provide the structural rigidity, while the skin merely provided aerodynamic fairing for the rocket. While titanium was used for some portions of the structure, it wasn't considered an appropriate material for the sheathing due to to its high cost and the non-reusable nature of the Saturn V booster stages.

2007-09-11 02:11:59 · answer #4 · answered by The Capn 3 · 1 0

No this is not any longer. Rockets are fairly no longer measured in velocity, yet in kilos of thrust, because of the fact the fee of a rocket relies upon completely the place that's. In area, faraway from heavy gravitational forces discovered on the fringe of planets, the rocket can shop going speedier, with the two small burns or slingshot maneuvers around planets (a minimum of until the fee of light) and the size of the rocket engine could properly be very small to skill it. that extensive quantity of preliminary skill grow to be mandatory purely to cut loose from earth's gravity. The final Saturn rocket, particular as V, (Apollo manned lunar touchdown missions), consisted a prevalent degree powered via 5 F–a million engines, each and every producing a million.5 million kilos of thrust, the 2d degree contained 5 J-2 engines, and the 0.33 degree contained one J-2 (200,000 kilos of thrust each and every) engine. In this is translunar trajectory, the fee grow to be 24,500 mph. As for the quickest rocket right this moment, that must be the hot Horizons spacecraft with an Atlas V 551(Russian RD-a hundred and eighty) first degree; Centaur (RL10A-4-2) 2d degree, and famous individual 48B good rocket 0.33 degree. that's on a venture to Pluto. The craft would be rushing previous Pluto at style of 40 3,000 kilometers according to hour/27,000 miles according to hour.

2016-11-14 22:37:20 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It was definitely aluminum, probably T6061 alloy (because that's what is used in the aerospace industry, a lot).

Some of the pretty white color may be due to ice condensing on the outside, from the cold of the liquid oxygen causing the humidity of the Cape to condense on the outside of the rocket.

.

2007-09-11 04:34:43 · answer #6 · answered by tlbs101 7 · 0 0

I've found a very detailed document from NASA discussing the fabrication of the initial Saturn test vehicles as well as the subsequent Saturn V. I cannot find the exact material for the skin, but perhaps you can give it a look and see if you can find it.

2007-09-11 02:12:33 · answer #7 · answered by Jeff L 3 · 0 0

I think that skirts tend to either look kind of cheap or trashy if they are tight and short, or they are really just the run of the mill jean skirts that are not necessarily sexy.

2017-03-01 00:51:42 · answer #8 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Try maxi dresses with the relative side slits those can look great on you! It doesn't matter if you have long legs or not simply strut that skirt

2017-01-31 03:41:06 · answer #9 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

To keep the launch vehicle as light as possible--affording more weight to its payload, the Apollo spacecraft--the Saturn's skin was manufactured mostly of thin-gauge aluminum.

2007-09-11 02:10:34 · answer #10 · answered by remowlms 7 · 1 0

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