Sunday, 26 February 2023

Red Star in Orbit



I recently found a great new space history book, which details 100 great spaceships that made space exploration possible - 'Space Craft' by Michael H. Gorn. Rather than re-using existing photographs of craft that have been published before, it mainly relies on excellent technical illustrations of real and proposed craft. It was quite an eye opener for me as I thought I had seen all the main craft that had put man into space, but the book shows early designs for the likes of Mercury and Gemini capsules and also shows what was going on behind the iron curtain,

It was this historical detail which interested me most, as although many other books allude or suggest that there were other flights and probes sent up by Russia before Gagarin, detail is invariably scarce. Space Craft shows these undocumented and secret craft in surprising detail
and shows how the Soviets were able to make so many attempts in such a short period - it was by using a modular approach to spacecraft and re-using parts and designs from earlier ships. The Soyuz module for example is still in use sixty years later to re-supply the ISS and the basic design has changed little in this time.

One of my favourite craft has always been the Vostok capsule and I was surprised to see how the basic core elements had been used in many different configurations, to make probes as well as manned craft. The illustration in the book showing the many types of craft developed around the Vostok capsule inspired me to make my own version, with bits from the scrap box and a gas cannister from a beer can.

Half a toy cement mixer, some xmas beads and a handful of model parts and I had a passable model. A quick blast of grey primer, a bit of weathering and three straight pins for antennae, sealed the deal. I knocked up a simple base from a disk and an xmas bauble and glued on a small soviet hat badge for authenticity.


It sits nicely on my space book shelf now, next to my earlier Lunik and Sputnik models

 

12 comments:

  1. Thanks kev - so good you commentec twice?

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  2. Yep, I double downed on it!

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  3. WOTAN 1 is go for orbit !

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  4. Amazing scratch-build! Bravo!

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  5. Paul Adams from New Zealand2/27/2023 5:41 am

    The finished and painted model is a thing of beauty. Good job.

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  6. The author of the book is over at the SECRET PROJECTS FORUM there with you in the UK. Archipepe I think. He also posts at NASASPACEFLIGHT.COM
    Some talk about the Vostok separation system there:
    https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=58363.0

    Energia’s liquid-fueled strap-on boosters—with an upper stage—was called “Zenit” after a Vostok based spysat. The other way around originally…Gagarin where the spy package sat.

    Vostok is still being built as FOTON

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foton_(satellite)

    An all-Russian Zenit rocket is Irtysh (Soyuz-5).

    I think the Vostok sphere gave us the Sontaran ships. Sputnik III may have subconsciously inspired the Dalek design Cusick did for Terry Nation…not just pepperpots. I remember an old drawing of it.

    More:

    https://www.reddit.com/r/pics/comments/2tm6hz/the_soviet_sattelite_sputnik_3_looks_an_awful_lot/




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  7. Ah—here is the Zenit (Vostok) spysat launched by the Zenit launcher
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zenit_(satellite)

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    Replies
    1. Ive looked on Secret Projects, its a goldmine of info!

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  8. Lovely model! Does the book include the Gemini capsule with retractable landing skids and Rogallo wing descent concept?

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    1. probably does Looey, along with earlier concepts for the Mercury capsule too. a great modelling resource

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