- Little Joe 1
Infobox Space mission
mission_name = Little Joe 1
spacecraft_name =
insignia = Mercury_insignia.jpg
insignia_size = 160px
stats_ref =
sign = LJ-1
crew_members = 0
launch_pad =Wallops Island
launch =August 21 ,1959
landing =August 21 ,1959
duration = 0 min 20 s
lunar_orbits =
time_lunar_orbits =
orbits =suborbital
apogee = 0.4 mi - 0.6 km
perigee =
apolune =
perilune =
period =
altitude =
inclination =
distance = 0.5 mi - 0.8 km
mass = 1,007 kg
previous =Mercury Test-Start
next =Big Joe 1
The Little Joe 1 was asolid fuel rocket that was designed to test the Mercury spacecraft Launch Escape and Recovery systems. It was 48 feet (14.6 m) in height, weighed (at maximum) 41,330 pounds (18,747 kg), was 6.66 feet (2 m) in diameter, consisted of four Pollux and four Recruit clustered, solid-fuel rockets, could develop athrust of 250,000 lbf (1,110 kN), and could lift a maximum payload of 3,942 pounds (1,788 kg). Fact|date=November 2007The Little Joe 1 was being prepared for launch from the
Wallops Flight Facility ,Wallops Island ,Virginia , onAugust 21 ,1959 . Suddenly, about a half hour before the scheduled launch, the escape rocket fired and pulled the Mercury spacecraft away from the launch pad. The spacecraft reached anapogee of 2000 feet (600 m) and landed about 2000 feet away. The unexpected triggering of the Launch Escape System was caused by a transient or stray electrical current. The flight time was 20 seconds.Fact|date=November 2007Historical correction :-The Book "This New Ocean" claims a transient or glitch for the mysterious launch of LJ1. The Wallops Island Accident log for the Little Joe 1 is recorded as being due to the Abort system being wired directly into a live "Bus-Bar". The batteries used were English, and shipped to the U.S. flat and shorted. On charging at the pad for LJ1 the batteries when having enough charge, actuated the sequencer for the abort system, and sensing insufficient altitude fired the squibs in the abort motor. Insufficient power in the batteries then failed to initiate the tower jettison motor and capsule parachute recovery charge, and both crashed into the sea. The error was found to be in the wiring diagram, and not a technician error, "glitch or transient" , and the failure was inevitable after initial charging started on the pad of LJ1.( NASA Reference Publication 1028) Wallops Island Flight Test Range:The First Fifteen Years. ( Joseph Adams Shortal ) (December 1978) Page 199.P.A.Mcquillan.See also
*
Little Joe External links
* [http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-4201/cover.htm This New Ocean: A History of Project Mercury - NASA SP-4201]
* [http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/sc-query.html NASA NSSDC Master Catalog]
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