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This is a WikiProject Rocketry maintenance category which lists related articles which require modifications to their infoboxes to bring them in line with new specifications. Pages in this category include
The magazine also covered model rocketry clubs' launch meets and contests. From August 1969 to February 1972 Model Rocketry incorporated The Model Rocketeer, the official journal of the National Association of Rocketry. The September 1969 issue of Model Rocketry shown at the right has a typical cover design and contents. The cover photo shows ...
Rocketry —rockets and rocket ... This page was last edited on 19 April 2024, at 23:45 (UTC).
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Rocketry portal; This page is within the scope of WikiProject Rocketry, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of rocketry on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks. Rocketry Wikipedia:WikiProject Rocketry Template:WikiProject Rocketry ...
Sport Rocketry is the official journal of the National Association of Rocketry. Sport Rocketry is the longest continually published magazine devoted to the sport rocket hobby. It is published bi-monthly and features regional launch coverage, construction and technical articles, rocket plans, scale data, competition tips, and product reviews.
Amateur rocketry was an especially popular hobby in the late 1950s and early 1960s following the launch of Sputnik, as described in Homer Hickam's 1998 memoir Rocket Boys. One of the first organizations set up in the US to engage in amateur rocketry was the Pacific Rocket Society established in California in the early 1950s.
Ye-6T/1 ("Ye-66A") (1961) After setting a new world speed record, Ye-6T/1 "31 Red" was rebuilt again to try to set a new world altitude record. To this end it had a U-21 rocket booster added to a fairing in the tail, and kept the upgraded R11F2-300 turbojet.