| Date of Review |
August 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Glencoe |
| Subject |
Explorer I |
| Scale |
1/6 |
| Kit Number |
5901 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
N/A |
| Pros |
Simple build |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$9.98 |
Background
In the late 1950s, Dr. Werner von Braun was pushing his dream
to reach into space. Working at the US Army's ballistic missile
labs, he proposed a design named Orbiter that would put a satellite
into orbit. The concept lost out to the US Navy's Vanguard
program, but von Braun continued to develop the concept under
a program called Jupiter. This program was officially designed
as an intermediate range ballistic missile.
When the Russians put Sputnik into orbit in 1957, the space
race was kicked into high gear. When the Navy's Vanguard launch
vehicle exploded in flight, the Army and von Braun brought
forth Juno - a Jupiter with an Explorer I satellite payload.
The launch was successful, the Jupiter pushed the payload
to 5,520 mph. At separation, the upper stage containing a variety
of solid-fuel rocket motors kicked in and pushed the satellite
up to an orbital velocity of 17,680 mph - in 24 seconds!! Now
THAT is acceleration!
The Kit
The Glencoe 1/6 Explorer I kit is an interesting kit. At 1/6
scale, the Explorer wasn't very big - it didn't have to be.
It was essentially a sounding rocket that had been mounted
atop an ICBM first stage and a huge kick motor for a second
stage. The result worked!
While I don't know the origin of this kit, I do know that
this is one of many molds rescued and restored by Glencoe.
For its age, the kit offers many interesting and innovative
features (okay, read this as 'fun').
My example is molded in tan styrene and from the instructions,
was one molded as a single tree. The project starts with those
two silver-molded styrene box halves in the photo. This is
display stand for the Explorer, but it has a hand crank on
the side to be able to rotate the missile atop the base. Of
course all of the gears go inside the box halves before they
are assembled.
The fuselage halves of the Explorer itself are hinged to reveal
the interior, so you can pose the rocket open or closed after
assembly. The science payload goes into the upper half of the
rocket body while the lower half contains the fuel cells for
the Explorer's final stage motor.
Only one decal goes on the Explorer - this is the logo for
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), the other two decals go
onto the base to resemble placards.
Conclusion
This is an interesting piece of history in this box on two
counts - the subject of the first successful US unmanned satellite,
and this highly detailed kit that was definitely ahead of its
time. With a suggested retail price of less than $10.00 USD,
this is a fun and inexpensive project for the novice and experienced
spacecraft modeler alike. Definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to Glencoe Models for this review sample!
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