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Saturn-Shuttle

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The Saturn-Shuttle was a preliminary concept of launching the Space Shuttle orbiter using a modified version of the first stage of the Saturn V rocket. It was studied and considered in 1971–1972.

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3-727: An interstage would be fitted on top of the S-IC stage to support the external tank in the space occupied by the S-II stage in the Saturn V. It was an alternative to the SRBs . The addition of wings (and some form of landing gear) on the S-IC stage would allow the booster to fly back to the Kennedy Space Center , where technicians would then refurbish the booster (by replacing only the five F-1 engines and reusing

6-598: The Space Shuttle Challenger accident in 1986. Interstage In rocketry , an adapter is a hollow cylindrical or conical segment which provides a sound aerodynamic and structural connection, either between rocket stages (oftern referred to as an interstage ) or between a spacecraft and the top rocket stage (referred to as a payload adapter). It may shroud and protect vulnerable systems such as electrics or machinery of rocket engines /spacecraft from weather or noise caused by running engines. It

9-611: The tanks and other hardware for later flights). The Shuttle would handle space station logistics, while the Saturn V would launch components. This would have allowed the International Space Station , using a Skylab or Mir configuration with both U.S. and Russian docking ports, to have been lifted with just a handful of launches. The Saturn-Shuttle concept also would have eliminated the Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters that ultimately precipitated

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