
Image credit: USAF
Image source: Internet Archive

Image credit: USAF
Image source: Internet Archive

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Drew Granston

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Numbers Station

Image credit: Grumman
File source: NASA NTRS



Image credit: Douglas
Image source: SDASM Archives

ROMBUS
Configuration for a manned Mars mission (Project Deimos).

Project Deimos – Mars Landing Module
Frontiers of Space
Philip Bono & Kenneth Gatland
Macmillan, 1969
Image credit: Douglas
Image source: Numbers Station

Pegasus Intercontinental Passenger Rocket

Pegasus during atmospheric re-entry uses the LH2-cooled plug nozzle as a heat shield. The ballistic transport would convey 172 passengers and freight 7,456 miles (12,000 km.) in 39 min. without exceeding an acceleration of 3g during ascent or re-entry. At the arrival spaceport it would hover on rocket thrust during a soft landing in the vertical attitude.

Pegasus Passenger Compartment
Frontiers of Space
Philip Bono & Kenneth Gatland
Macmillan, 1969
Image credit: Douglas / Blandford Press
Images: Numbers Station, SDASM Archives




How re-usable ROMBUS-type launch vehicles can be applied to construction of a temporary lunar base (Project Selena).
Frontiers of Space is peppered with artwork from Douglas, including paintings by Don Charles and James Finnell. In the book, this section was illustrated with (pretty poor) knock-offs. Why? Who knows? These were the masters.
Image credit: Douglas
Image source: SDASM Archives