This is a flying rocket model built by an unknown Czech manufacturer in the 1960s. It is not known whether it was flown. The model has a pasteboard body, balsa fins, and balsa nosecone. The plastic parachute is missing. A solid propellant rocket motor propels the model, and then at the end of the vertical flight it forces the release of a parachute. The model is then retrieved and can be used again. The model is launched from a launch pad, with a hand-held launch controller being used to ignite the motor. The model was donated by G. Harry Stine, one of the American pioneers in the field of flying rocket and missile models, in 1973.
This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum. It is either on loan or in storage.
United States of America
MODELS-Missiles & Rockets
Other: 1 x 13in. (2.5 x 33cm)
Cardboard
Wood
Paint
Rubber
Steel
Aluminum
Adhesive
Pasteboard body and balsa nose and fins
A19930839000
Gift of G. Harry Stine
National Air and Space Museum
Usage conditions apply
For more information, visit the Smithsonians Terms of Use.