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posted by janrinok on Wednesday January 19 2022, @08:21AM   Printer-friendly

After six decades, Russia will build its final Proton rocket this year:

Russia's main space corporation, Roscosmos, said it is in the process of building four more Proton rockets before it shuts down production of the venerable booster.

In a news release, Roscosmos said the four rockets are on an assembly line at the Khrunichev State Space Research and Design Center's factory in Moscow's Fili district. After their production is complete, these four rockets will be added to its present inventory of 10 flight-ready Proton-M rockets. (The news release was translated for Ars by Rob Mitchell.)

Russia said it plans to launch these remaining 14 Proton rockets over the next four or five years. During this time frame Russia plans to transition payloads, such as military communications satellites, that would have launched on the Proton booster to the new Angara-A5 rocket.

The final flight of the Proton rocket will bring an end to a long-running era. The first Proton rocket launched in 1965, nearly 57 years ago, amid the space race between the Soviet Union and the United States. Variants of the Proton rocket have launched 426 times, with about a 10 percent failure rate.

Notably, the Proton rocket has launched elements of four separate space stations—Salyut 6, Salyut 7, Mir, and the International Space Station. But the rocket, with a lift capacity of 23.7 metric tons to low Earth orbit, had come under increasing competition for commercial launches. As a result, whereas the Proton booster once launched 10 or 12 times a year, the flight rate has fallen to three or fewer missions a year since 2015.


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  • (Score: 2) by crafoo on Wednesday January 19 2022, @01:35PM (3 children)

    by crafoo (6639) on Wednesday January 19 2022, @01:35PM (#1213833)

    It's a good time to give thanks to the German and Russian people for giving the gift of spaceflight to the world.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 19 2022, @02:47PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 19 2022, @02:47PM (#1213846)

    The Russians jumpstarted their rocket program using German scientists seized from the same working groups as the Americans.

    So let us thank the REAL source of the rocketry innovators: Nazi Germany.
    The world thanks Adolph Hitler for his gift of bringing spaceflight to the world. Without his focused ballistic missile -- ahem, rocketry -- program, we would not be where were are today.

    Danke!

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday January 19 2022, @03:12PM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday January 19 2022, @03:12PM (#1213853) Journal
      Let us not forget the slave laborers [ushmm.org], I read that most were Soviet and Polish with a bit of other nationalities like Hungarian, German, and French.

      three hundred skilled Hungarian Jewish SS prisoners were transferred from the Volkswagen company, which ultimately lost the V-1 lead contractor role to Mittelwerk GmbH in October. Earlier in the summer, Dora got one thousand other Hungarian Jews from Auschwitz via Buchenwald, but these Jews were employed primarily in the worst construction jobs in Dora, Harzungen, and Ellrich.

      On November 1, the SS counted 32,471 prisoners in the system, of which 13,738 were in the main camp still informally known as Dora; over half were Soviet and Polish.

      The camp population in these months was all-male and non-Jewish; the predominant prisoner groups in order of size were Soviet, Polish, French, German, Belgian, and Italian.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 19 2022, @06:00PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 19 2022, @06:00PM (#1213889)

    Or, to quote von Braun, "Why are you asking me? You've got Goddard," to which the Americans replied, "Who?"