How Recovery System Would Work

  1. ROOST was designed for giant single-stage boosters of future like that in drawings here. The boosters, 50 feet in diameter and 173 feet tall, would weigh 10 million pounds loaded and have a cluster of 12 engines generating a mighty thrust of 12 million pounds.
  2. Booster speeds toward earth orbit carry a 160-ton payload that might be a nuclear stage with a manned capsule for moon or outer-space exploration. Cutaway of the booster shows how the deflated recovery bags are stored.
  3. In earth orbit, payload has separated, and recovery bags popped out from rear of rocket begin to inflate, throwing off protective plates. Here conical bag begins to take shape.
  4. Inflated cone-shaped bag enshrouds rocket while doughnut grips its middle like a choke collar. Booster can remain in orbit 24 hours until triggered for re-entry.
  5. As Roost settles gently in the sea, waiting surface ships pick up the dangling towlines to salvage the costly booster.

Popular Science
July 1963

Image credit: Douglas
Image source: SDASM Archives

LLV by Ron Simpson

Eagle Has Landed
Don Dwiggins
Golden Gate, 1970

Image credit: Douglas
Image source: Numbers Station

Phil Santos

Image credit: Douglas
Image source: SDASM Archives

Lunar Logistics Vehicle

Missiles and Rockets, Nov 26, 1962

Image credit: Douglas
Image source: Internet Archive