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File:Scout-D rocket - Smithsonian Air and Space Museum - 2012-05-15 (7246252390) (cropped).jpg

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Looking down at the Space Hall at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

This is "Rocket Row" -- a grouping of famous missiles and rockets. When the Air & Space Museum was in smaller quarters behind the Smithsonian Castle (prior to the opening of its current building in 1976), these stood in a row outdoors. They are now grouped in a major exhibit in the Space Hall.

Here is a Minuteman III (green and white) intercontinental ballistic missile, and Scout-D orbital rocket to the right.

The Scout was a class of rocket developed jointly by NASA and the U.S. Air Force to get small satellites into orbit. Scout is actually an acronym; it stands for "Solid Controlled Orbital Utility Test system". Because NASA wanted to get satellites into orbit immediately, the first Scourt rocket used off-the-shelf hardware. It was designed in 1957 at the Langley space center. Because solid fuel was easier to deal with, each stage of the Scout was a solid fuel rocket. There were four stages. The "Algol" first stage used an Aerojet General motor previously used in the Polaris missile. The "Castor" second stage was developed using the U.S. Army's Sergeant surface-to-surface missile, and used a Thiokol motor. The "Antares" third stage used an Allegany Ballistics Laboratory motor originally used in a Vanguard rocket. The "Altair" fourth stage also used an Allegany Ballistics motor.

The rocket's guidance system was gyroscopically based, and and used four fins on the first stage for stability in the atmosphere.

The Scout D was first built in 1972. It used an Algol III rocket motor, which greatly improved performance and thrust.

The Scout-D and the Scout G (another version with upgraded rocket motors) flew until the Scout program ended in 1994.
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Source Minuteman III missile - Scout-D rocket - Smithsonian Air and Space Museum - 2012-05-15
Author Tim Evanson from Cleveland Heights, Ohio, USA
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