News Does that N-1 animated render looks convincing to you ?

Looks like the technical drawings of it. Some stagings look a bit weird though.
 
I stumbled upon this... Any opinions ?

Just to say how incredible everything looks! Very impressive animations. Also, I've never even heard of the N-1. I'm such a n00b.
 
Looks like the technical drawings of it. Some stagings look a bit weird though.

Yeah, I agree, and I especially think about what we can see at 2:33 . No lattice structure under the shroud ? Is that believable ? :hmm:
 
Essentially, this was good find. Hard to find good N-1 footage anywhere. It's a very nice animation for a very sad rocket (it would've been pretty badass, had it not been for that first stage).

To me, the tri-sector staging actually looks pretty Soviet. Don't forget the Soyuz splits the same way, evidenced by the awesome launch footage from Sentinel 1A.
 
Nice Ani., would love to see those 3D models in Orbiter!
 
I did not realize that the crew transfer for lunar descent and return was to utilize EVAs instead of a docking tunnel, and that only one cosmonaut went down to the surface (out of a total crew of 2).

I had in my head that the N-1 had a thrust of 11 million lbs vs. about 8 million for the Saturn V, and wondered why the Soviets didn't send along a wet bar and a sauna to the moon because they could lift it. It looks like payload weight actually was a problem.
 
I had in my head that the N-1 had a thrust of 11 million lbs vs. about 8 million for the Saturn V, and wondered why the Soviets didn't send along a wet bar and a sauna to the moon because they could lift it. It looks like payload weight actually was a problem.

Not just that. The N-1 also had a much higher structural mass than the Saturn V.
 
Not just that. The N-1 also had a much higher structural mass than the Saturn V.

And not just that : another thing you have to consider is the ISP. The N-1 had no LOX/LH2 stage ; Saturn V had 2. Makes a serious difference in terms of fuel consumption. Using only LOX/RP-1 and hypergolics for a beyond LEO mission is clearly not optimal. The Saturn was a step forward in engines technology. Which is a bit ironical, because russians were light-years ahead in 1957 with the R-7 engines. And later, the Energia program allowed them to get back (the RD-170 derivatives, including the RD-180 used for the Atlas V). But that was AFTER Valentin Glusko admitted that fancy and lethal oxydizers like Fluorine were not such a good idea.
 
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