Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 30, 2026

Juno V

The Juno V series of rockets were a design that was proposed in the late 1950s but cancelled. The rockets were multi-stage and, although they failed to reach production, their sections were used in other designs. The Juno V was an eight-engine cluster concept, requiring second and third stages to make a complete booster. Depending on the stages added, the rocket would either be a Juno V-A or a Juno V-B.

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General three-stage Juno V concept source ↗

The Juno V series of rockets were a design that was proposed in the late 1950s but cancelled. The rockets were multi-stage and, although they failed to reach production, their sections were used in other designs.1 The Juno V was an eight-engine cluster concept,2 requiring second and third stages to make a complete booster.3 Depending on the stages added, the rocket would either be a Juno V-A or a Juno V-B.45

Juno V-A

Juno V-A: Saturn I first stage and Titan I as second and third stages source ↗

Juno V-A was studied in 1958, as a new name for the Super-Jupiter rocket. Super-Jupiter planned on using four Rocketdyne E-1 engines in its second stage, but this project was cancelled so V-A would use the S-I first stage to propel it into space and a whole Titan I ICBM to continue the journey.4 Juno V-A was never developed, but all its stages were used on different launch vehicles, now retired as of today.

Juno V-B

Juno V-B, studied in the same year as Juno V-A, was proposed for lunar and interplanetary missions into space. It was just like the Juno V-A, except the third stage, originally the second stage of a Titan I booster, would be replaced with a Centaur C high-energy third stage.5 A year after Juno V-B's study, the booster received a new name: the Saturn A-1, which, like the Juno series of rockets was never built in its original planned form, but all its stages were used on different launch vehicles.

References

References

  1. Koelle, H. H. (Heinz Hermann) (1958-11-15). "Juno V Space Vehicle Development Program". Saturn V Collection. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
  2. "Rocket Engine, Liquid Fuel, H-1 | National Air and Space Museum". airandspace.si.edu. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
  3. Bilstein, Roger E. (1980). Stages to Saturn (PDF). NASA. p. 36. ISBN 0-16-048909-1.
  4. "Juno V-A". www.astronautix.com. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
  5. "Juno V-B". www.astronautix.com. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
External links
See also

See also