Thanks very much, Piorun, for posting those images. I've been working from 2 line drawings in Peter Alway's book 'Rockets Of The World' (plus one small grainy photograph) and aside from those, up until now have not really had much to go on. There is a nice drawing of the V-5-V with VGAS payload in Alway's 2002 supplement - but, again, the image you have posted offers additional details. I can't tell what color is specified for the fin tips of WERTIKAL-1 (the fins appear all white in the reference I have). Is there any chance you could send me copies that are larger versions of the images you posted?
Your R-5M model looks great! The launch stand adds to the immersion factor.
Thanks again,
Sam
Hi CurlSnout,
Thanks, I had begun making this R-5 a long time ago, but I focused on other projects, so I shelved it. There are still a bit things to do: the steering surfaces behind the nozzle require remodelling, the texture has to be more detailed, I need to add protective covers to the launch table, therefore your Vertikal appears to be a far more matured, refined and ready-to-use work — especially with the textures!
My apologies — I haven’t noticed that not only the images in the post were compressed, but also the attachments too: so I’m reuploading them into the zip folder below. They originate presumably from the communist era magazine titled „Modelarz” (lit.”The Model Maker”) from ca. 60s-70s, which has remained a valuable source of various reference drawings until the current day.
The descriptions say as follows:
- Rakieta geofizyczna „Wertikal-1” — „The geophysical rocket „Vertikal-1”"
- Skala 1:48 — „Scale 1:48” (it must be the scale of the original print)
- Wymiary rakiety - „The rocket’s dimensions”
- Rzut boczny rakiety między 4 a 1 statecznikiem — „Lateral projection of the rocket between the 4th and the 1st fin”
- Rzut boczny rakiety między 2 a 1 statecznikiem — „Lateral projection of the rocket between the 2nd and the 1st fin”
- Rzut boczny rakiety między 2 a 3 statecznikiem — „Lateral projection of the rocket between the 2nd and the 3rd fin”
- Rzut boczny rakiety między 3 a 4 statecznikiem — „Lateral projection of the rocket between the 3rd and the 4th fin”
- Przekroje w odniesieniu do stateczników 1, 2, 3, 4 — „Cross-sections in relation to the fins no. 1, 2, 3, 4”
- Spaw — „Welding”
- Spaw elektryczny — „Electric welding”
- Spód rakiety — „The rocket’s bottom side”
- Oznaczenie kolorów — „Color marking”
- Biały — „White”
- Czerwony — „Red”
- Czarny — „Black”
- Srebrny — „Silver”
- Beżowy — „Beige”
The other plan lists also
Brązowy — „Bronze”
As to the terminology, the Russian Cyrylic letter В/в is transcribed to Polish as W/w (similarly as e.g. in German) rather than V/v as in English — hence the „Wertikal” and „W-5-W” on the drawings instead of the „Vertikal” and „V-5-V” (for the same reason, we refer to the Восток spacecraft as „Wostok” instead of „Vostok”, and to the Ми-24В helicopter as „Mi-24W” instead of „Mi-24V”, moreover we know the cosmonaut Валентина Терешкова not as „Valentina Tereshkova” — we write „Walentina Tierieszkowa”, and so on).
My R-5 is based upon a Russian drawing from, presumably, a similarly themed Russian magazine „Modelist Konstruktor” (also attached) which offers some additional details — my strategy is to prepare meshes of ballistic missiles as the first ones (as they are chronologically „primary”), and then to move on to derived rocket designs (as they are chronologically „secondary”) — just like their designers did in the real life. For example, the R-12 ballistic missile after some additional works might be remodelled as the Kosmos-2 launch vehicle (work in progress). I also almost finished the Thor IRBM and the Agena B upper stage, so I will be able to match them into the Thor-Agena B space launcher, and after some further modifications: into the Thor-Agena A and other Thor/Delta family members with relatively little effort. My intention is to release all of them some day for our community as a highly standardised addon, or a modular bundle of addons.
I put there also a couple of incredibly useful but rare photographies taken in a Ukrainian spaceflight museum from Korolev’s hometown — Zhytomyr, which I collected a couple of years ago from the depths of the Web. They depict a Vertikal rocket — it must be exactly the same specimen, as the one that we can see in the photo in the
R-5’s article on Wikipedia. I couldn’t find their source, and the site inscribed on them apparently no longer works — The Author, whoever he is, has done us a huge favor, for which we are sincerely grateful to him.
It appears to lack the movable rudders on the ends of its fins — a photo of another specimen shows the rudders and the way how they are jointed to the fins.
Best regards and high apogees,
Michał