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Nazi V-2/ A-4  Rocket  Technology

German test launch.

image:V-2-launch.jpg   The V-2 rocket was an early ballistic missile used by Germany during the latter stages of World War II against mostly British and Belgian targets.  
Table of contents

1 Pre-operational History

2 Operational history

3 Post-War V-2 Usage

4 Technical Details

 

      
     
       
     

German V2 Rocket

The V-2 (A4) Ballistic Missile Technology : 1- 2- 3 -4

V-2 Rocket schematic diagram ( Technics Scheme )

V2 Raketenfertigung in Friedrichshafen 1942-45

V-2 Rocket Museum ( V-2 Rocket Engine) : 1 23- 4- 5- 6- 7- 8-9-10

   

     

 
   
 
 

Werner Von Braun (second from right) and pals tour the Nazi rocket facility at Peenemünde. Between 7,000 and 20,000 slave laborers were worked to death at various German rocket facilities during the war.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Nazi V2 Rocket Motor Laboratory: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 -5- 6- 7- 8 -9-10

If this alone does not chill you, consider the following: Von Braun was far more than just a "German rocket scientist" or a mere "Nazi". Documents obtained by TEM researchers show he was nothing less than a Major in Hitler's "SS", the fearsome and fanatically loyal arm of the Nazi war machine entrusted to carry out the most inhuman acts of the regime. That such a man could spend his later years standing next to presidents at medal presentations and giving speeches on the wonders of space exploration, rather than rotting in prison where he belonged, is a testament to the political realities of the cold war.

     
   

  

Pre-operational History

As early as 1927 members of the German Rocket Society had started experimenting with liquid fueled rockets. By 1932 the Reichswehr started taking notice of their developments for potential long-range artillery use, and a team led by General Walter Dornberger was shown a test vehicle designed and flown by Wernher von Braun. Although the rocket was of limited ability, Dornberger saw Von Braun's genius and pushed for him to join the military.

Von Braun did just that, and eventually most of the other members of the Society did too. In December 1934 Von Braun scored another success with the flight of the A2 rocket, a small model powered by ethanol and liquid oxygen, with work on the design continuing to attempt to improve reliability.

By 1936 the team had moved on from the A2 and started work on both the A3 and A4. The later was a full sized design with a range of about 175 kilometers (109 miles), a top altitude of 80 kilometers (50 miles), and a payload of about a tonne. It was clear that Von Braun's designs were turning into real weapons, and Dornberger moved the team from Kummersdorf (near Berlin) to a small town, Peenemünde, on the island of Usedom on Germany's Baltic coast , in order to provide more room for testing and better secrecy.

The A3 proved to be problematic, and a redesign was started as the A5. This version was completely reliable, and by 1941 the team had fired about seventy A5 rockets. The first A4 flew in March 1942, flying about a mile and crashing into the water. The second launch made it to seven miles in altitude before exploding. But the third rocket launched on October 3, 1942 changed things, when the rocket followed its trajectory perfectly and landed 120 miles away, and became the first man-made object to enter space as well as the first man-made machine to exceed the speed of sound.

Production started in 1943 on the Vergeltungswaffe 2 (reprisal weapon 2), or the V-2 as it became better known, at the insistence of Goebbels' propaganda ministry. The Allies were already aware of the weapon -- at a test site at Bliza, Poland a fired missile had been recovered by Polish resistance agents from the banks of the River Bug, and vital technical details had been given to British intelligence. They launched a massive bombing campaign against Peenemünde which slowed testing and production considerably.

Dornberger had always wanted a mobile launch platform for the missiles, but Hitler pressed for the construction of massive underground blockhaus structures to launch from. V-2's would arrive from a number of factories in a continuous stream on several redundant rail lines, and launching would be almost continual.

              

The first such site started construction in the Pas-de-Calais area in 1943, but the British spotted it almost immediately and started a massive bombing campaign that eventually forced the Germans to give up on it. Another site was then started nearby in a huge quarry, but it wasn't long before that too was bombed into submission. Eventually they gave up on the area and moved to the south near Cherbourg, but once again the site was discovered and bombed -- this time while the cement was still wet.

Instead the plan was changed to build large truck-towed trailers for the missiles. The entire convoy for the missile, men, equipment and fuel required about 30 trucks. The missile was delivered to a staging area on a Vidalwagen and then the local crews would fit the warhead. Launch teams would then transfer their missile to their own Meillerwagen and tow it to the launch site. There it was erected onto the launch table, fueled, and launched.

The missile could be launched practically anywhere, roads running though forests being a particular favourite. The system was so mobile and small that not one Meillerwagen was ever caught.

     

Operational history

Dora : production chain.                                                   

Image:Dora_-_production.jpg    

V-2 mass production was conducted at underground slave labour camps named Dora, near Nordhausen, Germany. About 10,000 slaves died of overwork or at the hands of their guards from the SS. These slaves were mostly prisoners of war, many were French and Soviet.

The first unit to reach operational status was Batterie 444 . On September 2, 1944 they formed up to launch attacks on Paris, recently liberated, and eventually set up near Houffalize in Belgium. The next day the 485th moved to The Hague for operations against London. Several launch attempts over the next few days were failures, but on the 8th both groups fired successfully.

On 3 March 1945 the allies attempted to destroy V2's and launching equipment near The Hague by a large-scale bombardment, but due to navigational errors the Bezuidenhout quarter was destroyed, killing 500 civilians.

The V-2 was militarily ineffective - its guidance systems were too primitive to hit specific targets, and its costs were approximately equivalent to a four-engined bomber, which were quite accurate, had longer ranges, carried many more warheads, and were reusable. Nevertheless, it had a considerable psychological effect as, unlike bombing planes or the V1 Flying Bomb, which made a characteristic buzzing sound, the V2 travelled faster than the speed of sound, with no warning before impact and no possibility of defense.

    This article written by the author of this site Geoff Richardson 

Conspiracy - Theory or Reality" was published in "Faster than Light "magazine

At the end of the 2nd World War in 1945 the most valuable treasure "looted" out of Germany was a group of Nazi rocket scientists which was spirited away by  U.S. secret agents in what  came to be known as "Operation Paperclip". The most famous of these rocket scientists was Vernher Von Braun - a Nazi war criminal who traded his scientific knowledge for U.S. citizenship and truly enormous  research and development budgets. Von Braun was quoted as saying The British could not afford us, The Russians terrified us, so we went to the Americans". Von Braun [ left ] joined the Nazi party in 1937 and then the S.S. in 1940 - he definitely was not a "simple scientist with no political beliefs" but was a murderous fascist who was prepared to spill the blood of innocents in order to fulfil his own ambitions.  Werner Von Braun in 1947 - NAZI scientist taken to the U.S. to continue V2 Rocket research.

 

Initially Nazi rocket research was carried out using "slave labour" at Peenemunde but when Allied bombing raids destroyed this site research facilities were moved to Dora - Mittlebrau , a series of underground , impenetrable caverns. Over 60,000 slaves worked round the clock at gunpoint converting the former calcium sulphate mines, the whole place being a vision of Hell to the unfortunate workers - many of whom came from Buchenwald Concentration Camp. Most feared of the caverns was Gallery 39 - the galvanizing shop - where very few lived longer than two weeks, their lungs disintegrating in the toxic fumes from the metal treatment plant. The V2 Rocket - the most desirable technology at the end of W.W.2 . There was almost no relationship to the V1, which was a crude pilotless aircraft. The V2, however, weighed nearly 12 tonnes and was powered by a liquid oxygen/alcohol mixture.

Any infringement of the rules resulted in the same penalty - death by hanging - many of the survivors of  Dora - Mittlebrau remember such days as when Von Braun noticed damage to the guidance system of a number of rockets. He immediately ordered  twelve workers to be hanged as a warning to others. In a little more than 18 months Von Braun witnessed over 20,000 men die in the terrible caverns of Dora - Mittlebrau.

Obviously the success of NASA and the U.S. space program  is based on the expertise of Von Braun and his Nazi cohorts  - in fact Von Braun was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his services to the Apollo Space Program but ,however, he was also involved in the development of missiles for use in the deployment of nuclear warheads and the U.S. Black Budget Program - mainly taking place at  Area 51'in Nevada. The ruthless, self seeking attitude of Von Braun is still evident at Area 51  as was proved in 1987 when civilian worker Robert Frost  came home ,screaming in pain and fear. This man and several other workers had been affected by mysterious chemical fires at Area 51 - two years later he was dead.

V-2 Rocket Technic Detail: 1- 2- 3- 4-5

Post-War V-2 Usage

US test launch.

At the end of the war a race started to retrieve as many V-2 rockets and staff as possible. Under Operation Paperclip three hundred train loads of V-2s and parts were captured and returned to the United States, as well as 126 of the principal designers, including both Wernher von Braun and Walter Dornberger. For several years afterward, the United States rocketry program made use of the supply of unused V-2 rockets left from the war. One of these modified V2s, in a test flight in the late 1940s, reached a then-record altitude of 400 kilometers (250 miles). Many of these rockets were used for peaceful purposes, including upper-atmosphere research.

Von Braun went to work for the US Army's Redstone Arsenal, eventually settling in Huntsville, Alabama in 1950. He quickly became the father of almost all US rocketry, working on the Redstone, Jupiter, Jupiter-C, Pershing, and Saturn rockets.

The USSR also captured a number of V-2s and staff, letting them set up in Germany for a time. In 1946 they were moved to the USSR where Groettrup headed up a group of just under 250 engineers. Starting with the V-2 they developed a number of new missile designs which would eventually lead to the SCUD missile. However none of his designs were directly put into production, instead local designers would use the better features in their own designs. The team was eventually repatriated in the 1950s after the local design teams had gained experience.                             

   

The British also captured a small number of V-2 missiles, and launched several of them from a site in northern Germany under Operation Backfire. However the engineers involved had already agreed to move to the US when the test firings were complete. The Backfire report however remains the most extensive technical documentation of the rocket, including all support procedures, tailored vehicles and fuel composition.

V2 Rocket Motor -- V2 Motor --

Newton's Third Law and Aircraft Propulsion
Activity

Technical Details

     

Image:V-2.pngThe V-2 had an operational range of about 300 kilometers (200 miles) carrying a 1000 kg (2000 lb) warhead.

The V-2 was propelled by a mixture of alcohol (ethanol) and water, combined with liquid oxygen. The turbo fuel pumps were propelled by hydrogen peroxide. The water-alcohol mixture was kept in a tank of aluminium to save weight, which put a high pressure on German war economy, as this metal was rare and valuable.

The fuel was pumped through the walls of the main burner, so that it would heat the mixture and at the same time cool the burner, so that it wouldn't melt from the heat. The fuel was then pumped into a main burner chamber through several nozzles, which assured the correct mixture of alcohol and oxygen at all times.

Some later V-2s used "guide beams", i.e. radio signals transmitted from the ground, to navigate the missile toward its target, but the first models used a simple analog computer that would adjust the azimuth for the rocket, and the flying distance was controlled by the amount of fuel, so that when the fuel ran out "brennschluss", the rocket would stop accelerating and soon reach the top of the parabolic flight curve.

The painting of the operational V-2s was mostly a camouflage ragged pattern with several variations, but in the end of the war a plain olive green rocket also appeared. During tests, the rocket was painted in a characteristic black/white chessboard pattern which aided in determining if the rocket was spinning around its own longitudinal axis.

     

V2 Rocket Technical Details:

A4/V2 Design & Tech Data

V2  Nazi Rocket scientists

A4 Propulsion system

German v2 rocket

Project: A4 - Red Eagle

The German V-2 (A-4) in WWII

 

Influences

The V-2 rocket plays a major part in Thomas Pynchon's novel Gravity's Rainbow.

The lunar rocket in Tintin's comic's books Destination Moon and Explorers on the Moon looks like a V-2.

External Links

http://www.v2rocket.com/

Encyclopedia Astronautica article on the V2 rocket

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