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After building a Lego set of the Saturn V, moon lander, Apollo capsule and moon
buggy last night, I got to wondering about the colors scheme of say, the Saturn V. I was wondering why, on a big, white rocket, they have the black panels scattered about. Is it just for aesthetics or is there a reason for it? Thanks. |
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![]() The Mighty T.B. wrote: The painted black patterns are for ground and aircraft tracking from launch through orbital insertion. It makes it easier for engineers who review post flight film of a launch to see how the rocket is rolling, etc as well as providing points of references if say, a single engine of a cluster of five fails. But unlike the earlier rockets, the only paint pattern on Saturn V that has a pattern that lets you figure out roll in relation to the vehicle's ascent is on the top of the second stage. Other than that, all the paint patterns are symmetrical. So if you're trying to figure out the roll orientation on stage1 after separation if clouds obscure it, you had better hope you can read the A,B,C,D markings on its four base fins. Many earlier rockets had different paint markings on different sides of the base of the first stage , so you could always determine which side you were looking at on film (see V-2, Aerobee, and Jupiter C ). Pat |
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Pat Flannery wrote:
Other than that, all the paint patterns are symmetrical. So if you're trying to figure out the roll orientation on stage1 after separation if clouds obscure it, you had better hope you can read the A,B,C,D markings on its four base fins. I suspect that at that point, the no longer care about the 1st stages roll performance. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. http://derekl1963.livejournal.com/ -Resolved: To be more temperate in my postings. Oct 5th, 2004 JDL |
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"OM" wrote:
The painted black patterns are for ground and aircraft tracking from launch through orbital insertion. It makes it easier for engineers who review post flight film of a launch to see how the rocket is rolling, etc as well as providing points of references if say, a single engine of a cluster of five fails. ...I tried to find the thread from about 10 years ago where we discussed this, but these days finding things on Google Groups isn't as easy as it used to be. I suspect there's something broken in the search engine and/or posts have been lost(*). But IIRC, there were thermal issues involved in some of the striping WRT keeping condensation arond certain LOX areas from freezing up too much. ISTR what triggered that thread was why the S-IC paint scheme changed between the test fit mockup (AS-500F) and Apollo 4 (AS-501). The paint scheme was indeed changed before Apollo 4's launch due to thermal issues as the black paint drew more unwanted heat on certain areas of the first and third stages. If you look carefully at good close-up photos of Apollo 4's first stage on the pad, you may notice that the longer black patterns and black ring on the inter tank area of the first stage were actually originally painted on that stage and painted over with white on the "ribbed" inter tank section leaving a brighter white pattern on the first stage inter tank area. This was done after the Saturn V was "stacked" in the Vehicle Assembly Building but before it was rolled out to the pad. Befo http://www.apolloarchive.com/apg_thu...ID=KSC-67P-208 After: http://www.apolloarchive.com/apg_thu...geID=S67-43593 T.B. |
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![]() The Mighty T.B. wrote: The paint scheme was indeed changed before Apollo 4's launch due to thermal issues as the black paint drew more unwanted heat on certain areas of the first and third stages. If you look carefully at good close-up photos of Apollo 4's first stage on the pad, you may notice that the longer black patterns and black ring on the inter tank area of the first stage were actually originally painted on that stage and painted over with white on the "ribbed" inter tank section leaving a brighter white pattern on the first stage inter tank area. This was done after the Saturn V was "stacked" in the Vehicle Assembly Building but before it was rolled out to the pad. The Soviets suffered somewhat the same problem with the N-1. It started out with the first and second stages being overall green and the third stage being half green and half white, then moved to the third stage being overall white and the first two stages being mixed white/green to prevent overheating in the Sun, then finally ended up being pure white top-to-bottom: http://www.geocities.com/danimir.geo/n1.html Pat |
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![]() OM wrote: ...I tried to find the thread from about 10 years ago where we discussed this, but these days finding things on Google Groups isn't as easy as it used to be. I suspect there's something broken in the search engine and/or posts have been lost(*). But IIRC, there were thermal issues involved in some of the striping WRT keeping condensation arond certain LOX areas from freezing up too much. ISTR what triggered that thread was why the S-IC paint scheme changed between the test fit mockup (AS-500F) and Apollo 4 (AS-501). Pat? Jorge? You guys remember that thread? Not that one... Saturn IB did use a very involved paint scheme on its first stage and its eight fins, which may have involved the four external tanks that held kerosene instead of LOX, and desired heat take-up on those, particularly from the central LOX tank chilling them. A bitch to paint that stage right on a model. Still, it could be worse; let's do a checkerboard: http://ganymede.nmsu.edu/tharriso/saturn1b.jpg And of course AMT never thought to include this decal for the roll pattern on their 1/300th scale Mercury/Redstone model either, at least on its re-release: http://www.redstone.army.mil/history...stone_3_02.jpg Now, that Monogram US Missile Arsenal set...now _that_ was a decal sheet! That thing was ****in' _huge_ and had little decals right down to "US Army" markings on the Hawk missile, which was around a inch and a quarter long. Pat Pat |
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