Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Best Lunniy Korabl Book EVER!!!


   If you want to learn about the amazing spacecraft designed by the Soviet Union to transport cosmonauts to and from the lunar surface, then you need to read "Memories of Our Lunar ship" by Vyacheslav M. Filin! 

   Published just three years after the USSR official acknowledged the existence of their participation in the Race for the Moon, this 1992 classic is the single best reference for those wanting to learn about the history and creation of the Lunniy Korabl. Written in the style of a memoir, this 71 page book provided the first glimpse into the soviet lunar conquest.

   From its' first conception to the complete design and testing, this book describes the creativity, emotion, and euphoria that went into creating the technological counterpart to Americas' Lunar Module.  

   Many photographs and diagrams of the L-3 components, flight systems, and work-up drawings showing the evolution of the LK design were published for the first time in this book.




About the Author:  Born in 1939 Vyacheslav Michailovich Filin holds the title of Honored Designer of the Russian Federation.

   Upon graduating from the Moscow Aviation institute in 1963, he began his career with OKB-1 and was a member of the team of designers and engineers who worked to develop the L-3 Lunar Complex.  He went on to become the Chief Designer of the the Soviet Unions Energia/Buran Space complex. He has served as Vice President, and First Deputy General Designer to RSC Energia, the worlds' largest rocket and space corporation.
   
   V. M. Filin has also authored several other books related to space projects in which he had direct participation, including:  The Path to Energia, and Launch Site - The Ocean. In 2005 he published an abridged "Memories of Our Lunar ship" under the title, "Our Attraction to the Moon". This updated version included the "Memoirs of (five other) Leading Designers".

   Vyacheslav Filin is retired, but still acts as a private consultant for RSC Energia.



Monday, September 19, 2011

Getting to know the Lunniy Korabl

   If you want to get to know a vehicle really well, try building a large scale visually accurate model of it from scratch. Unlike putting together a model in a box, there are no instructions to read, no pictures to show you what goes with what. Everything here has to be analyzed and measured. Plus, in this case since I'm trying to make it a technical replica, so I have to look at what every thing looks like from every view and angle, and I have to know what's under and inside of everything. It's not enough to know what the Control and Display Panels look like, and how they are positioned inside the Cabin; I need to know what's supporting the Control Panels, and how those supporting structures are fastened to the ship.

   Why? Why is something like knowing how the Display Panels are fastened to the ship important? Let me answer that question with an example.

   Let's say I'm a classic muscle car fanatic, and I especially love the '71 Mustang Mach I with the 327 Cleveland engine. I go to the Mall and find that someone has displays of Classic Muscle cars in 1:5 scale, and better yet, they have a beautiful model of a '71 Mach I with a 327 Cleveland engine. Cool!!! 

   But as I look at the model closely I see that whoever built this model didn't put any kind of score-line between the Headers and the Block on the engine. It's just one solid looking piece. This is a HUGE distraction, because I know that whoever built this model doesn't have a clue how a 327 Cleveland works, let alone the basic principles of the Internal Combustion Engine! 

   I walk away with much less fascination than I had when I first saw the display.

   It's a little more complicated with the spaceship the Soviet Union designed to take their cosmonauts to the Moon (after all, I want this to be an educational display), but the principle is the same. If I'm going to put a landing radar on this spacecraft then I need to know what the landing radar was, how it operated, and in particular which design model was used on the Lunniy Korabl.


This DA-019 "Planeta" Landing Radar (seen here without its cover) was
 the predecessor of the model later developed for use on the Lunniy Korabl.



Sunday, September 18, 2011

Mission Statement


   Today there are a number of small businesses which create museum quality display models of spacecraft in various scales. Many are impressive, and all are quite expensive. But in my view they lack one particular component of the original spacecrafts: they are useless from a real engineering perspective. It's not enough to build a replica in the correct scale and color. These spacecraft were built by man, from unique materials, and invariably they all show the signs of their construction. There are welds, seams, fabrics, nuts and bolts used to create the original ships. This is where my designs will separate themselves from what is the normal standard for today's display pieces. I want to recreate every detail, no matter how insignificant it may seem.

   When people go to museums, they are at times mesmerized by the actual spacecraft. Sometimes it is because of where it's been, but most always it is because, in reality, there is so much to see on these creations. There are various textures and colors, and always ... details. Put a child in front of a scale model of a spacecraft, and you may catch their attention. But put this same child in front of a real spacecraft, and it tends to make them stop, stare, and sometimes even dream. I want to reproduce scale models that mimic the real creations, so that a child not only sees the ships, but so that they can see the details at a scale which makes it wondrous.

   The first scale replica I will create is the first one I dreamed of creating 15 years ago. The 11F94 Lunniy Korabl. This was the spacecraft designed during the1960's, and early 1970's to carry Soviet Cosmonauts to and from the lunar surface. It's not so much that it took me this long to get started, but rather that it took this long to get enough information and photographic evidence to get a reasonable idea of what one actually would have looked like. 

   It is only in the past year that two major pieces of information about the Lunniy Korabl became available. The first is the scale. You just can't build a model based on the published information that will be in sync with the published illustrations. As with every other part of this project, I received help from a knowledgeable source. Although this time the helper had two of the best tools a scale modeler could ever hope for ... access to the real thing, and a tape measure!

   In October of 2009 I received an email from a Russian comrade who is a legend in his own time. And this email had seven attachments. I nearly wet myself with excitement as I opened each attachment to find a sketch with notes and measurements from an actual LK! Several weeks ago I obtained the other piece of critical information; photographs of an LK with the remains of the Thermal Cloth which would have covered key parts of the spacecraft, PLUS a copy of a sketch by V.M. Filin showing where this fabric was located, and also where it wasn't.  But last week I got the "Rosetta Stone" of the Lunniy Korabl scale! I was privy to an actual Engineering Drawing of my revered Lunniy Korabl!!!!

   There was a single Engineering Drawing of the Lunniy Korabl shown at an Exhibition for The State Archives of the Russian Federation.  It was a side view of the LK with legs folded, and the railing used to protect it from its' own launch shroud attached. Aside from verifying several features about the LK, it had only two measurements on it. But they were to the exact millimeter, and they showed precisely where the measurements related to! No more guessing how correct my scale is. I could care less that almost two years of calculations had to be thrown out, and all the parts I've been working on are now scrap. Because now, I OWN this thing!!!

This image originally appeared on the Novosti Kosmonavtiki Forum
 in a distorted form. Using information obtained from an actual 
Engineering Construction Drawing it has been adjusted to scale. 
   What follows will be a record of the construction of a 1:6 scale* model of the 11F94 Lunar Spacecraft. What I won't do is create speculative items. There will be no Hula-Hoop for the cosmonaut, or winch to haul an unconscious cosmonaut back to the lunar cabin. Until I find proof, such things are speculative, and may or may not have existed. Only IF I find evidence of something, will I include it. Everything I put on or in this model will be based on study of all five remaining LK, and what I believe would have been the most likely appearance based on real hardware, credible statements, technical illustrations, and photographic evidence.

   I don't know how long it will take me to build this, but I do know that NASM will be remodeling their museum for an opening in 2017. I intend for this to be there by then.

   David L. Rickman

*This was originally to be 1:5 scale, but reduced to make the entire display visible to the younger, impressionable minds... of dreamers.