Why the Saturn V was a three-stage rocket? Because you can’t go to space with a single-stage launch vehicle (in fact you may go, but going to space is one thing, and staying there is another). And forget about getting to the Moon. In the video below, photographer Tim Dodd aka ...
The Saturn 5 was a three-stage launch vehicle. It was designed for development work on a fully equipped Apollo spacecraft in geocentric and selenocentric orbits, as well as for the delivery of astronauts to the moon. Its launch weight was as much as 2,950 tons, its length was 85.6 m ...
Stage backdrops like the barren desert and trashy city street feel uninspired. The riverside-at-sunset location looks nice but could have been lifted from any fighting game. One highlight is the way you can knock your opponent through the ceiling and keep fighting in the new location. ...
↑Rudden, Dave .Feature: Eight Extremely Embarrassing E3 Moments. Archived fromthe originalon 19 August 2008. Retrieved on 14 July 2008. "Sony's keynote speaker went up on stage, said "Two hundred and Ninety-Nine Dollars" and walked off the stage." ...
VTOL slider to deploy lander legsThe Saturn V was an American human-rated expendable rocket used by NASA between 1966 and 1973. The three-stage liquid-fueled launch vehicle was developed to support the Apollo program for human exploration of the Moon, and was l... read more...
It was the largest, most powerful rocket ever built and, having served as the launch platform for the Apollo manned moon mission, probably qualifies as the most famous rocket as well.
The Saturn V is still the most powerful rocket ever built due to its five F-1 engines in the first stage. These had 7.6 million pounds of thrust power which have not been replicated to this date. Where is the Saturn V rocket now? Various parts of the Saturn V rocket can be seen at...
More than 40 years in the making, the Saturn V rocket was born out of the bloodiest war in history but grew up to become humanity's crowning engineering achievement.
The Saturn family of rockets included the Saturn I (10 launches), Saturn IB (9 launches), the three-stage Saturn V (12 launches), and the two-stage Saturn V (1 launch). Although some flights experienced significant problems, no Saturn rocket failed catastrophically in flight. Saturn rockets...
Saturn V was simply the heaviest, tallest, and most powerful rocket ever built, and capable of carrying the heaviest payload. First launched in 1967, the rocket consisted of three stages, with the S-IVB serving as its third stage. Taller than the Statue of Liberty, Saturn V had a mass ...