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Taepodong-1

Taepodong-1
Type technology demonstrator
Service history
Used by  North Korea
Production history
Manufacturer  North Korea
Specifications
Weight 33.4 tons
Length 25.8 m
Diameter 1.8 m

Engine liquid-fueled
Guidance
system
inertial
Taepodong-1
Chosŏn'gŭl 대포동-1
Hancha 大浦洞-1
Revised Romanization Daepodong-1
McCune–Reischauer Taep'odong-1

Taepodong-1 was a three-stage technology demonstrator developed by North Korea, a development step toward an intermediate-range ballistic missile. The missile was derived originally from the Scud rocket, and was tested once in 1998 as a space launch vehicle.

On August 31, 1998, North Korea announced that they had used this rocket to launch their first satellite Kwangmyŏngsŏng-1 from a pad on the Musudan-ri peninsula. However, the satellite failed to achieve orbit; outside observers conjecture that the additional third stage either failed to fire or malfunctioned. This is contrary to official statements of the North Korean state media, which stated that the satellite achieved orbit about 5 minutes after launch. On this single launch, the main two-stage booster flew for 1,646 km without any significant problems.

According to post-launch analysis of the launch vehicle, debris from the third stage fell as far as 4,000 kilometers from the launch pad. Some analysts believe that a three-stage space booster variant of the Taepodong-1 could be capable of travelling as far as 5,900 kilometers with a very small payload.

In 2003 the US Defense Intelligence Agency reported to the Congress that, "We have no information to suggest Pyongyang intends to deploy the Taepo Dong 1 (TD-1) as a surface-to-surface missile in North Korea. We believe instead that the vehicle was a test bed for multi-stage missile technologies." In 2009 the US National Air and Space Intelligence Center assessed that the Taepodong-1 was a technology demonstrator, a development step toward longer-range missile development.

The Taepodong-2, or Unha-2, was the successor to the Taepodong-1 technology demonstrator, with a first unsuccessful test launch in 2006.

The rocket's first stage is a Rodong-1 MRBM, and the second stage is a Hwasong-6 short-range ballistic missile.


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