Mirak (original) (raw)


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Mirak


Part of V-2


Mirak
Mirak
Credit: © Mark Wade

Mirak - a 'Minimum Rocket' - was conceived by Rudolf Nebel to demonstrate the practicality of the liquid rocket, using the thrust chamber developed for the abandoned Oberth rocket. Mirak was realized not by Nebel, but talented engineer Riedel. It flew over 100 times in 1931-1932 and convinced the German Army of the practicality of the rocket as a weapon of war.

Status: Retired 1932. First Launch: 1931-05-10. Last Launch: 1932-08-01. Number: 7 . Thrust: 588 N (132 lbf). Gross mass: 20 kg (44 lb). Height: 3.50 m (11.40 ft). Diameter: 0.10 m (0.32 ft). Span: 0.10 m (0.32 ft).

In December 1929, after the failure of Oberth to produce a liquid propellant rocket for Fritz Lang, the VfR was in shambles. Winkler had resigned as president. A meeting was held, with Nebel, Wurm, Oberth, Klaus Riedel, Winkler, and Willy Ley in attendance. It was decided to try and get the Oberth rocket materials back from Ufa and press on to demonstrate flight of a liquid propellant rocket. For this purpose the Oberth rocket was much too ambitious and probably wouldn't work anyway. Nebel proposed building a new 'Minimum Rakete' or 'Mirak' to demonstrate that it could be done. The group obtained funding from two private benefactors and began to ground test and perfect Oberth's 'Kegelduese' conical rocket motor in the summer of 1930. By July of that year the Kegelduese is being run for 90 seconds, generating 7 kgf and consuming 6 kg of liquid oxygen and 1 kg of gasoline in that time (specific impulse 90 seconds). A month later Nebel and Riedel begin a series of tests of the Mirak rocket at the farm of Riedel's grandparents near Bernstadt, Saxony. They slowly perfect the motor, finally achieving significant net thrust by September, when the motor explodes, ending the test series.

Nebel and the other designers realize that using liquid oxygen to cool the combustion chamber simply would not work - it turned to gas, and the excessive pressure eventually burst the oxygen tank. They turn to a water-cooled combustion chamber. The end result was an aluminum pressure-fed engine that weighed 85 g but produced 32 kgf while burning 160 g of liquid oxygen and gasoline per second - a specific impulse of 200 seconds. The new design proves reliable and is demonstrated to visitors from the American Rocket Society in April 1931.

In May 1931 Riedel improvised a rocket, using the thrust chamber developed for the Mirak, fed by two long tanks containing liquid oxygen and gasoline, which would form guiding sticks for the forward-mounted engine. The lashed-together rocket rises to 20 m on its first 'static' test. On 14 May a flight-weight version of Riedel's 'flying test stand' takes off into a looping trajectory, sending the VfR experimenters running for cover, but reaching 60 m altitude in the process. Further launches through that summer of the Mirak II reach altitudes of over a kilometer, and demonstrate recovery by parachute and reuse of the rocket. 87 test flights are conducted that summer.

The Mirak III debuted the following summer. The rocket was 3.5 m long and 10 cm in diameter, had a gross lift-off mass of 20 kg, an empty mass of 10 kg, and a thrust of 60 kgf. The new design featured the engine forward of the stack, followed by the liquid oxygen tank, then the alcohol tank, then the manometers and other elements of propellant pressurization. The new-design engine was developed by Walter Riedel and Arthur Rudolph at the Heylandt Company. The rocket reached an altitude of 20 to 70 m before veering horizontally into a forest. An exhaust velocity of 2000 m/s was expected, but only 1700 m/s was demonstrated.

As the influence of Nazism in German Society increases, the VfR disintegrated in political disputes and withdrawal of funding by its wealthiest backers. German rocket development was taken over by the Army, and the remaining private experimenters - Nebel, Winkler, and Puellenberg - were ordered by the Gestapo to cease and desist.



People: Nebel. Country: Germany. Launch Sites: Raketenflugplatz, Kummersdorf. Bibliography: 17, 394, 47, 693.


Photo Gallery



Mirak 2 Mirak 2Credit: © Mark Wade


Mirak MirakCredit: © Mark Wade


Mirak Mirak


ORM at Kummersdorf ORM at Kummersdorf


ORM at Kummersdorf ORM at Kummersdorf



December 1929 - . LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


1930 April 11 - . LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


1930 July 23 - . LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


August 1930 - . LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


1930 September 27 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. Launch Complex: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


Spring 1931 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. Launch Complex: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


1931 May 10 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


1931 May 14 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


1931 May 23 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


Early June 1931 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


July 1931 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


August 1931 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


October 1931 - . Launch Site: Raketenflugplatz. Launch Complex: Raketenflugplatz. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


March 1932 - . LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


August 1932 - . Launch Site: Kummersdorf. LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.


Fall 1932 - . LV Family: V-2. Launch Vehicle: Mirak.



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