LEGO Designer:
Grant Passmore (Eiffelman)
Designed:
June 2017
Categories:
Launch Vehicles, All, Apollo Program, Space Agency - NASA, Suborbital and Sounding Rockets
Further Information and References:
Wikipedia
Astronautix
Rocket Rundown : The Successful failure of BP-22
Little Joe II was an American rocket used from 1963–1966 for five uncrewed tests of the Apollo spacecraft launch escape system (LES), and to verify the performance of the command module parachute recovery system in abort mode. It was named after a similar rocket designed for the same function in Project Mercury. Launched from White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, it was the smallest of four launch rockets used in the Apollo program.
Human-rating of the Apollo launch escape system was planned to be accomplished at minimum cost early in the program. Since there were no reasonably priced launch vehicles with the payload capability and thrust versatility that could meet the requirements of the planned tests, a contract was awarded for the development and construction of a specialized launch vehicle. The rocket’s predecessor, Little Joe, had been used in testing the launch escape system for the Mercury spacecraft from 1959–60.
Downloads
Part count: 201 bricks, 67 lots.
Unit | width | length | height |
---|---|---|---|
Studs | 10.0 | 12.0 | 35.4 |
Inches | 3.1 | 3.8 | 11.2 |
Centimetres | 8.0 | 9.6 | 28.4 |
No external URL provided.
Launch History information from space.skyrocket.de
Launch History information from space.skyrocket.de
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