The
V-2 rocket ( ,
retaliation weapon),
technical name
A4, was a short range
ballistic missile that was developed by
the end of
World War II in
Nazi Germany. The rocket was the world's first
ballistic missile and first human
artifact to achieve
sub-orbital spaceflight. It was the
progenitor of all modern rockets.
Over 3,000
V-2s were launched as military rockets by the German Wehrmacht against Allied targets in World War II, mostly London
and later
Antwerp
, resulting in the death of an estimated 7,250
military personnel and civilians. The weapon was presented
by the Nazi propaganda as a retaliation for the bombers that
succeeded in attacking ever more German cities from 1942 until the
end of the war.
An
estimated 20,000 inmates at the Mittelbau-Dora
plant died constructing V-2s. Of these,
9,000 died from exhaustion and collapse, 350 were hanged (including
200 executed for acts of sabotage) and the remainder were either
shot or died from disease or starvation.
Developmental history
In 1919,
the Smithsonian
Institution
published Robert
Goddard's groundbreaking work, A Method of Reaching
Extreme Altitudes. The report describes Goddard's
mathematical theories of
rocket flight, including his experiments with
solid-fuel
rockets. Along with
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky's earlier
work,
The Exploration of Cosmic Space by Means of Reaction
Devices (1903), Goddard's work influenced subsequent pioneers,
Hermann Oberth and
Sergey Korolev.
In the late 1920s, a young
Wernher von
Braun acquired a copy of
Hermann
Oberth's book,
Die Rakete zu den Planetenräumen
(
The Rocket into Interplanetary Space).
Starting in 1930, he
attended the Technical University of Berlin
, where he assisted Hermann Oberth in liquid-fueled rocket motor
tests. Von Braun was working on his creative
doctorate when the Nazi Party gained
power in Germany
. An
artillery captain,
Walter
Dornberger, arranged an Ordnance Department research grant for
von Braun, who from then on worked next to Dornberger's existing
solid-fuel rocket test site at
Kummersdorf. Von Braun's thesis,
Construction, Theoretical, and Experimental Solution to the
Problem of the Liquid Propellant Rocket (dated 16 April 1934)
was kept classified by the
German army
and was not published until 1960. By the end of 1934, his group had
successfully launched two rockets that rose to heights of 2.2 and
3.5
kilometers.
At the time, Germany was highly interested in American physicist
Robert H. Goddard's research. Before 1939, German
scientists occasionally contacted Goddard directly with technical
questions. Von Braun used Goddard's plans from various journals and
incorporated them into the building of the
Aggregat (A) series of
rockets.
Following successes at
Kummersdorf with
the first two
Aggregate series
rockets,
Wernher von Braun and
Walter Riedel began thinking of a much
larger rocket in the summer of 1936based on a projected
25-metric-ton-thrust engine.
After the
A-4
project was postponed due to unfavorable aerodynamic stability
testing of the
A-3 in July
1936,von Braun specified the A-4 performance in 1937,and A-4 design
and construction was ordered c1938/1939.During 28-30 September
1939,
Der Tag der Weisheit (English: the day of wisdom)
conference met at Peenemünde to initiate the funding of university
research to solve rocket problems.By late 1941, the
Army Research Center at
Peenemünde possessed the technologies essential to the success of
the A-4. The three key technologies for the A-4 were large
liquid-fuel rocket engines, supersonic aerodynamics, gyroscopic
guidance and rudders in jet control. At the time,
Adolf Hitler was not particularly impressed by
the V-2; he pointed out that it was merely an artillery shell with
a longer range and much higher cost.
In early September 1943, von Braun promised the Long-Range
Bombardment Commission that the A-4 development was 'practically
complete/concluded', but even by the middle of 1944, a complete A-4
parts list was still unavailable.Hitler was probably still not
impressed with the weapon but was impressed by the enthusiasm of
its developers, and needing a "wonder weapon" to maintain German
morale, Hitler authorized its deployment in large numbers.
Technical details
.svg/300px-V-2_rocket_diagram_(with_English_labels).svg)
At launch the A-4 propelled itself for
up to 65 seconds on its own power, and a program motor controlled
the pitch to the specified angle at engine shutdown, from which the
rocket continued on a free-fall (
ballistic) trajectory. The rocket reached a
height of before shutting off the engine.
The fuel and oxidizer pumps were steam turbines, and the steam was
produced by concentrated
hydrogen
peroxide with
potassium
permanganate catalyst. Both the alcohol
and oxygen tanks were an aluminium-magnesium alloy.
The combustion burner reached a temperature of 2500−2700 °C
(4500 - 4900 °F). The alcohol-water fuel was pumped along the
double wall of the main combustion burner. This cooled the chamber
and heated the fuel (
regenerative cooling). The
fuel was then pumped into the main burner chamber through 1,224
nozzles, which assured the correct mixture of alcohol and oxygen at
all times. Small holes also permitted some alcohol to escape
directly into the combustion chamber, forming a cooled
boundary layer that further protected the
wall of the chamber, especially at the throat where the chamber was
narrowest. The boundary layer alcohol ignited in contact with the
atmosphere, accounting for the long, diffuse exhaust plume. (Later,
post-V2 engine designs not employing this alcohol boundary layer
cooling show a translucent plume with
shock diamonds.)
The V-2 was guided by four external rudders on the tail fins, and
four internal
graphite vanes at the exit of the motor. The LEV-3 guidance
system consisted of two free
gyroscopes (a
horizon and a vertical) for lateral stabilization, and a gyroscopic
accelerometer connected to an electrolytic integrator (engine
cut-off occurred when a thin coating of silver was
electrochemically eroded off a poorly conducting base).Some later
V-2s used "guide beams" (radio signals transmitted from the ground)
to navigate towards the target, but the first models used a simple
analog computer that adjusted the
azimuth for the rocket, and the flying
distance was controlled by the timing of the engine cut-off,
"Brennschluss", ground controlled by a Doppler system or
by different types of on-board integrating accelerometers. The
rocket stopped accelerating and soon reached the top of the
(approximately
parabolic) flight
curve.
The painting of the operational V-2s was mostly a
camouflage ragged pattern with several
variations, but at the end of the war a plain olive green rocket
also appeared. During tests, the rocket was painted in a
characteristic black-and-white
chessboard
pattern, which aided in determining if the rocket was spinning
around its longitudinal axis.
Testing
The first successful test flight was the third on 3 October
1942:

Engine cut-out - 1, Deutsches Museum,
Munich
Two test
launches were recovered by the Allies: The Bäckebo
Bomb on 13 June 1944 in Sweden and one recovered by Polish resistance on 30
May 1944 from Blizna
and
transported to the UK during Operation Most III.
Test
launches of V-2 rockets (Aggregate-4) were made at
Peenemünde
, Blizna
and Tuchola Forest
, and after World War II, at Cuxhaven, White Sands
Proving Grounds
, Cape
Canaveral
, and
Kapustin
Yar
.
Various problems were identified during V-2 development and
testing:
- * To reduce tank pressure and weight, high flow turbopumps were
used to boost pressure.
- * A short and lighter combustion chamber without burn-through
was developed by using centrifugal injection nozzles, a mixing
compartment, and a converging nozzle to the throat for homogeneous
combustion.
- * Film cooling was used to prevent burn through at the nozzle
throat.
- * Relay contacts were made more durable to withstand vibration
and prevent thrust cutoff just after lift-off.
- * Ensuring that the fuel pipes had tension-free curves reduced
the likelihood of explosions at 4000-6000 ft.
- * Fins were shaped with clearance to prevent damage as the
exhaust jet expanded with altitude.
- * To control trajectory at lift off and supersonic speeds,
heat-resistant graphite vanes were used as rudders in the exhaust
jet.
Airburst problem
Through mid-March 1944, only 4 of the 26 successful Blizna launches
had satisfactorily reached the Sarnaki target area due to in-flight
breakup (
Luftzerleger) on entry into the atmosphere.
Initially excessive alcohol tank pressure was suspected, and by
April 1944 after 5 months of test firings, the cause was still not
determined.
Major-General Rossmann, the Army Weapons
Office department chief, recommended stationing observers in the
target area -- c/June, Walter Dornberger and Wernher von Braun set up a camp at the
center of the Poland target zone (one impact was 300 feet from an
armed missile.) After moving to the Heidekraut
, SS Mortar Battery 500 of the 836th Artillery
Battalion (Motorized) was ordered on 30 August to begin test
launches of eighty 'sleeved' rockets. Testing confirmed the
so-called 'tin trousers' -- a tube designed to strengthen the
forward end of the rocket cladding—reduced the likelihood of
airbursts.
Production
A
production line was nearly ready at Peenemünde
when the Operation Hydra
attack caused the Germans to move production to the Mittelwerk in the Kohnstein
where 5,200 V-2 rockets were built:
| Period of Production |
Production |
| Up to 15 Sep 1944 |
1900 |
| 15 Sep to 29 Oct 1944 |
900 |
| 29 Oct to 24 Nov 1944 |
600 |
| 24 Nov to 15 Jan 1945 |
1100 |
| 15 Jan to 15 Feb 1945 |
700 |
| Total |
5200 |
Launch sites

A V2 launched from a fixed site in
Summer 1943
Following
Operation Crossbow bombing,
initial plans for launching from the massive underground Le Blockhaus
and La
Coupole
or from fixed pads such as near the
Chateau du Molay
were dropped
in favor of mobile launching. Eight main storage
dumps were planned and four had been completed by July 1944 (the
one at Mery-sur-Oise
was begun in August1943 and completed by
February 1944). The missile could be launched practically anywhere,
roads running through forests being a particular favorite. The
system was so mobile and small that not one Meillerwagen was caught
in action by Allied aircraft, although
Raymond Baxter reported that he shot at a V2
from his Spitfire as it was launched.
An average of ten V-2s were launched per day and up to 1000 V-2s
could be launched per month, given sufficient supply of the
rockets.
Operational history
After Hitler's 29 August declaration to begin V-2 attacks as soon
as possible, the offensive began on 8 September 1944 with a single
launch at Paris, which caused modest damage near
Porte d'Italie, .
Two more launches by
the 485th followed, including one from The Hague
against London
on the same
day at 6:43 p.m. -- the first landed at Chiswick
which killed 63-year-old Mrs. Ada Harrison,
3-year-old Rosemary Clarke, and Sapper Bernard Browning on leave
from the Royal Engineers. Upon hearing the double-crack of
the supersonic rocket (London's first-ever),
Duncan Sandys and
Reginald Victor Jones looked up from
different parts of the city and exclaimed 'That was a rocket!', and
a short while after the double-crack, the sky was filled with the
sound of a heavy body rushing through the air. The Germans
themselves finally announced the V-2 on 8 November 1944 and only
then, on 10 November 1944, did Winston Churchill inform Parliament,
and the world, that England had been under rocket attack "for the
last few weeks."
Over the next few months the number of V-2s fired was at least
3,172, distributed over the various targets as follows:
- *
1664: Antwerp
(1610),
Liege
(27),
Hasselt
(13), Tournai
(9), Mons
(3),
Diest
(2)
- *
1402: London
(1358),
Norwich
(43),p289 Ipswich
(1)
- *
76: Lille
(25),
Paris
(22), Tourcoing
(19), Arras
(6),
Cambrai
(4)
- *
Maastricht
19
- *
Remagen
11
The final two exploded on (or near) their targets on 27 March 1945.
The last
British civilian killed was Mrs. Ivy Millichamp, 34, in her home in
Elm Grove, Orpington
. An estimated 2,754 civilians were killed in
London by V-2 attacks with another 6,523 injured, which is two
people killed per V-2 rocket. However, this understates the
potential of the V-2, since many rockets were misdirected and
exploded harmlessly. Accuracy increased greatly over the course of
the war, particularly on batteries where
Leitstrahl-Guide Beam
apparatus was installed, with V-2s sometimes landing within
meters of the target.
Accurately targeted missiles were often
devastating, causing large numbers of deaths—about 160 in one
explosion in a Woolworth's
department store in New
Cross
, south-east London and 567 deaths in a cinema in
Antwerp
—and
significant damage in the critically important Antwerp
docks.
Countermeasures
Unlike the
V-1, the V-2's speed and
trajectory made it invulnerable to anti-aircraft guns and fighters,
as it dropped from an altitude of at up to four times the speed of
sound. A plan was proposed whereby the missile would be detected by
radar, its terminal trajectory calculated, and the area along that
trajectory saturated by large-caliber anti-aircraft guns. The plan
was dropped after
operations
research indicated that the likely number of malfunctioning
artillery shells falling to the ground would do more damage than
the V-2 itself.
The defence against the V-2 campaign was to destroy the launch
infrastructure—expensive in terms of bomber resources and
casualties—or to cause the Germans to "aim" at the wrong place
through
disinformation. The British
were able to convince the Germans to direct
V-1 and V-2s aimed at London to less
populated areas east of the city. This was done by sending false
impact reports via the German espionage network in Britain, which
was controlled by the British (the
Double Cross System).
There is a record of one V-2, fortuitously observed at launch from
a passing American
B-24 Liberator,
being shot down by .50 caliber machine-gun fire.
Ultimately the most successful countermeasure was the Allied
advance that forced the launchers back beyond range.
On 3
March 1945 the allies attempted to destroy V-2s and launching
equipment near The
Hague
by a large-scale bombardment, but due to
navigational errors the Bezuidenhout
quarter was destroyed, killing 500 Dutch
civilians.
Assessment
The V-2 program was the single most expensive development project
of the Third Reich: 6048 were built, at a cost of approximately
100,000
Reichsmarks each; 3225
were launched.
SS General Hans
Kammler, who as an engineer had
constructed several concentration
camps including Auschwitz
, had a reputation for brutality and had originated
the idea of using concentration camp prisoners as slave laborers in the rocket program. The V-2
is perhaps the only weapon system to have caused more deaths by its
production than its deployment.
"… those of us
who were seriously engaged in the war were very grateful to Wernher
von Braun. We knew that each V-2 cost as
much to produce as a high-performance fighter
airplane. We knew that German forces on the
fighting fronts were in desperate need of airplanes, and that the
V-2 rockets were doing us no military damage.
From our point of view, the V-2 program was almost as
good as if Hitler had adopted a policy of unilateral
disarmament." (Freeman
Dyson)
The production of the fuel for one V-2 required 30 tons of
potatoes. Sometimes as Germany lacked enough explosives to put in
the V-2, concrete was used and sometimes they put in V-2s
photographic propaganda of German citizens who had died in allied
bombing.
The V-2 lacked a
proximity fuse, so
it could not be set for
air burst; it
buried itself in the target area before or just as the warhead
detonated. This reduced its effectiveness. Furthermore its guidance
systems were too primitive to hit specific targets, and its costs
were approximately equivalent to four-engined bombers, which were
more accurate (though only in a
relative
sense), had longer ranges, carried many more warheads, and were
reusable. Moreover, it diverted resources from other, more
effective programs. Nevertheless, it had a considerable
psychological effect as, unlike bombing planes or the
V1 Flying Bomb, which made a characteristic
buzzing sound, the V-2 traveled faster than the
speed of sound, with no warning before impact
and no possibility of defense.
With the
war all but lost, regardless of the factory output of conventional
weapons, the Nazis resorted to V-weapons as a tenuous last hope to
influence the war militarily (hence Antwerp
as V-2
target), as an extension of their desire to "punish" their foes and
most importantly to give hope to their supporters with their
miracle weapon. The V-2 had no
effect on the outcome of the war, but its value, despite its
overall ineffectiveness, was in its novelty as a weapon which set
the stage for the next 50 years of ballistic military rocketry,
culminating with
ICBM during the
Cold War and modern space exploration.
Unfulfilled plans
A submarine-towed launch platform was tested successfully,
effectively making it the prototype for
submarine-launched
ballistic missiles. The project codename was
Prüfstand
XII (Test stand XII), sometimes called the
rocket U-boat. If deployed, it would have
allowed a
U-boat to launch V-2 missiles
against United States cities, though only with considerable effort
(and likely limited effect).
Whilst interned after the war by the British at
CSDIC camp 11 however,
Dornberger was recorded as saying that he
had begged the
Führer to stop the
V-weapon propaganda, because nothing more
could be expected from just one ton of explosive. To this
Hitler had replied that Dornberger might not expect
more but he himself certainly did.
Commencing July 1944,
Hitler, followed by
Speer, in January 1945 made speeches alluding
to a U-boat campaign against USA to fire "robot" U-1 and U-2 bombs.
Germany did not possess any capability to fulfill these threats,
however. These schemes were met by the Americans with
Operation Teardrop.
ULTRA decrypts from the
Japanese
embassy at Berlin disclose twelve
dismantled V-2 rockets were shipped to the Japanese.
These left Bordeaux
in August 1944 on transport U-boats U-219 and U-195 reaching Djakarta
in December 1944. A civilian V-2 expert
was a VIP passenger on the U-234 bound for Japan
in May 1945
when the war ended in Europe. The fate
of these V-2 rockets is unknown.
Near the end of the war, German scientists were working on chemical
and possibly biological weapons to use in the V-2 program. By this
stage, the Germans had produced munitions containing
nerve agents sarin,
soman and
tabun, however they had never used any
of them.
Post-World War II usage
At the
end of the war, a race began between the United States
and the USSR
to retrieve
as many V-2 rockets and staff as possible. Three hundred
trainloads of V-2s and parts were captured and shipped to the
United
States
, and 126 of the principal designers, including both
Wernher von Braun and Walter Dornberger were in American
hands. Von Braun, his brother
Magnus von Braun, and seven others decided
to surrender to the United States military (
Operation Paperclip) to ensure they were
not shot dead by the Nazis as they were prized possessions or be
captured by the advancing Soviets.
- British and Canadian
In October 1945, British
Operation Backfire assembled
a small number of V-2 missiles and launched three of them from a
site in northern Germany. The engineers involved had already agreed
to move to the US when the test firings were complete. The Backfire
report remains the most extensive technical documentation of the
rocket, including all support procedures, tailored vehicles and
fuel composition. In his book
My Father's Son, Canadian
author
Farley Mowat, then a member of
the
Canadian Army, claims to have
obtained a V-2 rocket in 1945 and shipped it back to Canada, where
it is alleged to have ended up in the National Exhibition grounds
in Toronto.
Post-war V-2s launched in secret from Peenemünde may have been
responsible for a curious phenomenon known as
Ghost rockets, unexplained objects crossing
the skies over Sweden and Finland.
The
Canadian Arrow, a competitor for
the
Ansari X Prize, was based on the
V-2.
- USSR
The
USSR
also
captured a number of V-2s and staff, letting them set up in Germany
for a time. The first work contracts were signed in the
middle of 1945.
In 1946 (as part of Operation Osoaviakhim) they were
obliged to move to Kapustin
Yar
in the USSR, where Groettrup headed up a group of
just under 250 engineers. The first Soviet missile was the
R-1, an exact copy of the V-2.Most of the
German team was sent home after that project, but some remained to
do research until as late as 1951.Unbeknownst to the Germans, work
immediately began on larger missiles, the
R-2 and
R-5, based on
extension of the V-2 technology.
- United States
Operation Paperclip recruited German
engineers and Special Mission V-2
transported the captured V-2 parts to the United States
. At the close of World War II, over 300 rail cars filled with
V-2 engines, fuselages, propellant tanks, gyroscopes and associated equipment were brought
to the railyards in Las Cruces
, New
Mexico
, so they could be placed on trucks and driven to
the White
Sands Proving Grounds
in New
Mexico
.
In addition to V-2 hardware, the U.S. Government delivered German
mechanization equations for the V-2 guidance, navigation, and
control system, as well as for advanced development concept
vehicles, to U.S. defense contractors for analysis. In the 1950s
some of these documents were useful to U.S. contractors in
developing direction cosine matrix transformations and other
inertial navigation architecture concepts that were applied to
early U.S. programs such as the Atlas and Minuteman guidance
systems as well as the Navy's Subs Inertial Navigation
System.
A committee was formed with both military and civilian scientists
to review payload proposals for the reassembled V-2 rockets. This
led to an eclectic array of experiments that flew on the V-2s and
paved the way for American manned
space exploration. Devices were sent aloft
to sample the air at all levels to determine
atmospheric pressures and to see what
gases were present. Other instruments measured
the level of
cosmic
radiation.
Only 68 percent of the V-2 flights were considered successful. A
V-2 launched on on 29 May 1947 landed near Juarez, Mexico and was
actually a
Hermes B-1 vehicle.
The
U.S. Navy attempted to launch a reassembled
German V-2 rocket at sea—one test launch from the aircraft carrier
USS
Midway
was performed on 6 September 1947 as part of the
Navy's Operation Sandy. The
test launch was a partial success, the V-2 went off the pad, but
splashed down in the ocean only some 10 km (6.2 mi) from
the carrier.
Film of V-2 launch from USS Midway The launch
setup on the Midway's carrier deck is notable in that it used
foldaway arms to prevent the missile from falling down. The arms
pulled away just after the engine ignited, releasing the missile.
The setup may look similar to the
R-7
launch procedure, but in case of the R-7 the trusses hold full
weight of the rocket, not just react to side forces.
The
PGM-11 Redstone rocket is a
direct descendant of the V-2.

US test launch of a
Bumper
V-2.
In popular culture
- Thomas Pynchon makes the V-2
rocket the central point of his postmodern novel Gravity's Rainbow.
- The MGM movie Operation
Crossbow dramatizes Allied efforts to impede the V-1 and V-2
programs.
- Plot of the first episode of the Space Race docu-drama revolves around
the V-2 program.
- Several PC games, including Medal of Honor, Empires, Dawn
of the Modern World, Wolfenstein: Enemy
Territory, Command & Conquer: Red
Alert, Red Alert:
A Path Beyond, Rise of
Nations, Company of
Heroes, and Call of Duty
series feature V-2 missiles.
- Raymond Baxter (a famous RAF WW2
pilot and subsequent TV broadcaster), in an interview about his
wartime career, described flying over a V-2 rocket site during a
launch, and his wingman firing on the missile: "I dread to think
what would have happened if he'd hit the thing!"
- 1953 Tintin comic
Destination moon shows a lunar rocket that is clearly based on
the V2 design (including checkboard painting patterns).
- The V-2 and Operation
Paperclip are the point of divergence in the alternate history in Warren Ellis' Ministry of Space.
- The Hugo Awards, which is the
Academy Awards version for science fiction literature, artwork,
media, etc., is based on the V-2 missile.
- In the Star Trek: The
Original Series episode The City on the Edge of
Forever, the crew must escape a parallel universe in which
Germany won World War II by developing atomic bombs and using V-2s
to carry them.
Model rockets
Model rocket V-2s are available in many
sizes. For Germans, the 33-cm and 47-cm NORIS models are the best
flying versions, because they can be launched without special
permission with model rocket engines available in Germany.
Since the 1960s
Estes Industries
has released several versions of the V-2. Currently there are no
Estes V-2s in production.
Surviving V-2 examples and components
At least 20 V-2s still existed in 2005.
Australia
- One
at the Australian War Memorial
, Canberra, including complete Meillerwagen
transporter. The rocket has the most complete set of
guidance components of all surviving A4s. The Meillerwagen is the
most complete of the three examples known to exist. Another A4 was
on display at the RAAF Museum at Point Cook outside Melbourne. Both
rockets now reside in Canberra.
Netherlands
- One example, partly skeletonized, is in the collection of the
Netherlands Armymuseum. In this collection are also a launching
table and some loose parts, as well as the remains of a V2 that
crashed in The Hague immediately after the launch.
Poland
- Several large components, like hydrogen
peroxide tank and reaction chamber, the propellant turbopump and
the HWK rocket engine chamber (partly cut-out) are displayed at the
Polish
Aviation Museum
in Krakow
France

A V-2 replica on display in .
- One
engine at in Toulouse
.
- V-2
display at 'La
Coupole
' museum, Wizernes, France (Pas de Calais, five
kilometers from Saint-Omer).
- One
rocket body no engine, one complete engine, one
lower engine section and one wrecked engine on
display at 'La
Coupole
' museum
Germany
United Kingdom
United States
- One
(chessboard-painted) at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space
Center
in Hutchinson
, Kansas
.
- One
at the National Air and Space Museum
, Washington, D.C.
- One
at the National Museum of the United States Air
Force
, Dayton
, Ohio
.
- One
at the Fort
Bliss
Air Defense Museum, El Paso
, Texas
.
- One
(yellow and black) at Missile Park, White Sands
Missile Range
, White Sands
, New
Mexico
.
- One
at Marshall
Space Flight Center
in Huntsville
, Alabama
.
- One
at the U.S.
Space & Rocket Center
in Huntsville
, Alabama
.
- One
engine at the Stafford Air & Space
Museum in Weatherford, Oklahoma
.
- One
engine at the U.S.
Space & Rocket Center
in Huntsville
, Alabama
.
- One
engine at the National Museum of the United States Air
Force

- One
engine at the Museum of Science and
Industry in Chicago
.
- One
rocket body and one engine side by side (and
exposed to the elements) outside the US Army Ordnance Museum at
Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Aberdeen
, Maryland
. (moved to Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton
Ohio in approx 2005.)
- One rocket body at Picattinny Arsenal in Dover,
NJ.
- One engine in the Auburn University Engineering
Lab
- One
engine in the Blockhouse building on the Historic Cape
Canaveral Tour in Cape Canaveral
, Florida
.
Notes and references
The Peenemünde
replica incorporates many original components along with remanufactured ones and was put together by a group that included Reinhold Kruger, who worked as an apprentice at Peenemünde during the war.
The WSMR
exhibit is Mittelwerk rocket #FZ04/20919 captured during Special Mission V-2 and is painted with a yellow and black paint scheme of the first successful V-2 launched at WSMR
on 10 May 1946.
The V-2 consumed a third of Nazi Germany's fuel alcohol production and major portions of other critical technologies: 24,000 fighters could have been produced instead of the inaccurate V-weapons.
- Citations
- Further reading
- Dungan, Tracy D. (2005). V-2: A Combat History of the First
Ballistic Missile. Westholme Publishing. ISBN
1-59416-012-0.
- Huzel, Dieter K. (ca. 1965). Peenemunde to Canaveral.
Prentice Hall Inc.
- King, Benjamin and Timothy J. Kutta (1998). Impact: The
History of Germany's V-Weapons in World War II . (Alternately:
Impact: An Operational History of Germany's V Weapons in World
War II.) Rockville Center, New York: Sarpedon Publishers,
1998. ISBN 1-885119-51-8, ISBN 1-86227-024-4. Da Capo Press;
Reprint edition, 2003: ISBN 0-306-81292-4.
- Piszkiewicz, Dennis (1995). The Nazi Rocketeers: Dreams of
Space and Crimes of War. Westport, Conn.: Praeger. ISBN
0-275-95217-7.
External links