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Kosmos 1686

Kosmos 1686
Salyut 7 & Cosmos 1686.gif
Kosmos 1686 (top) docked to Salyut 7, imaged by Range-Doppler radar.
Salyut program insignia.svg
Salyut program insignia
Station statistics
Call sign Salyut 7
Launch 1985-09-27
02:01:00 UTC
Docked to Salyut 7 on 1985-10-02.
Launch pad Baikonur Cosmodrome, USSR
Reentry February 7, 1991
Mass 20,000 kg
Length 15 m
Width 16 m
Diameter 4.15 m
Perigee 219 km (118.25 nmi)
Apogee 278 km (150.1 nmi)
Orbital inclination 51.6 degrees
Orbital period 89.2 minutes
Orbits per day 16.14
Days in orbit 1959 days
Statistics as of deorbit & reentry
References:
Configuration
Salyut 7 and Cosmos 1686 drawing.png
Combined Kosmos 1686-Salyut 7 space station complex

Kosmos 1686 (Russian: Космос 1686 meaning Cosmos 1686), also known as TKS-4, was a heavily modified TKS spacecraft which docked unmanned to the Soviet space station Salyut 7 as part of tests to attach scientific expansion modules to stations in Earth orbit. The module which docked to the station was the FGB component of a TKS vehicle launched on September 27, 1985, and was designed to test systems planned for use on the Mir Core Module. The spacecraft docked with Salyut 7 on October 2, 1985, during the long-duration stay of the cosmonauts of its fifth principal expedition, which arrived on Soyuz T-14. It was the last flown TKS spacecraft.


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