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Black Knight (rocket)

Black Knight
Black Knight Rocket Edinburgh.JPG
Black Knight BK02
Function Vehicle for re-entry studies
Manufacturer Saunders-Roe
Country of origin United Kingdom
Size
Height 10.2 - 11.6 m
Diameter 0.91 m
Mass 12,500–14,200 lb
Stages 1 - 2
Capacity
Payload to
800 km
(Sub-orbital
115 kg
Launch history
Status Retired
Launch sites LA-5, Woomera
Total launches 22
Successes 22
First flight 7 September 1958
Last flight 25 November 1965
First stage - Black Knight
Engines Initially 4 chamber Gamma 201, later 4 chamber Gamma 301 engine.
Thrust

from 15,600 to 21,600 lbf

depending on version.
Burn time

120-145 seconds

depending on version
Fuel RP-1/HTP
Second stage (Optional) - Cuckoo
Engines 1 Solid
Thrust 8,200 lbf
Specific impulse 213 seconds
Burn time 10 seconds
Fuel Solid

from 15,600 to 21,600 lbf

120-145 seconds

Black Knight was a British launch vehicle to test and verify the design of a re-entry vehicle for the Blue Streak missile.

The United Kingdom's first indigenous rocketry project, Black Knight was manufactured by Saunders-Roe on the Isle of Wight, had its engines tested at High Down Rocket Test Site 1956 - 1959 under Paul Leyton,[1] and was launched at Woomera in Australia. Designed in 1955 by the Royal Aircraft Establishment and Saunders-Roe, 22 vehicles were fired between 1958 and 1965.

The Gamma rocket engines were designed and built by Armstrong-Siddeley at Ansty, near Coventry. One of the men who designed the engine was C. Donald.

The first two vehicles were 'proving rounds' - that is, launches without a payload in order to prove the design of the rocket. The third firing carried a re-entry vehicle. This flight showed that the chosen design for the re-entry body was a success.

Further firings with different heads showed up some unusual phenomena, and further tests under the code names Gaslight and Dazzle were carried out in conjunction with the United States.

A variety of heads were flown in these tests, including a plain copper sphere and a silica sphere. Heads composed of a composite asbestos-based material known as Durestos were also flown, and later tests finalised on a cone-shaped head re-entering pointed-end first, as used on many subsequent missile RVs.

All the re-entry firings took place on clear moonless nights, so that the luminous wake of the re-entry body could be observed photographically.


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