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The S-IB stage was the first stage of the Saturn IB launch vehicle, which was used for Earth orbital missions.[2] It was an upgraded version of the S-I stage used on the earlier Saturn I rocket and was composed of nine propellant containers, eight fins, a thrust structure assembly, eight H-1rocket engines, and many other components. It also contained the ODOP transponder. The propellant containers consisted of eight Redstone-derived tanks (four holding liquid oxygen (LOX) and four holding RP-1) clustered around a Jupiter rocket-derived tank containing LOX. The four outboard engines gimballed to steer the rocket in flight, which required a few more engine components. The S-IB burned for nearly 2.5 minutes before separating at an altitude of 42 miles (68km).
Fuel: RP-1 (Refined kerosene) 41,000 US gal (155 m3)
Oxidizer: Liquid oxygen (LOX) 66,277 US gal (251 m3) nominal capacity including 1.5% ullage volume (43,284 US gal / 163 m3 in four outer tanks plus 22,993 US gal / 87 m3 in center tank[3])
Besides the version flown as the Saturn IB stage, other versions were proposed for several vehicle concepts:[5]
Saturn S-IB-2
The S-IB-2 stage was studied in 1960 to power the Saturn C-3.[6] It was planned to be larger (with a height of 34.50m and a diameter of 8.25m), powered by two F-1 engines developing 3million pounds-force (13MN) of thrust, with a fueled mass of 1.6million pounds (730t).[7]
Saturn S-IB-4
The S-IB-4 stage was studied in 1960 to power the Saturn C-4, using four F-1 engines.[8]
The IB-11 stage was studied in 1966 to power the Saturn INT-11, Saturn INT-13 and Saturn INT-14, using eight H-1b engines and UA1207 solid boosters.[10]
Saturn IB-15
The IB-15 stage was studied in 1966 to power the Saturn INT-15, using eight H-1b engines and Minuteman first-stage strap-ons.[11]
Saturn S-1B-4
The S-1B-4 stage was studied in 1966 to power the Saturn INT-12, using four H-1b engines and UA1205 solid boosters.[12]
References
1234Kyle, Ed (December 6, 2012). "Saturn IB History". Space Launch Report . . . Saturn Vehicle History. Retrieved 2014-09-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
↑Wade, Mark (2001). "Saturn IB". Encyclopedia Astronautica. Archived from the original on May 4, 2002.