The 'V-2 Rocket' (
German:
Vergeltungswaffe 2) was the first
ballistic missile and first man-made object launched into space,
[2] the progenitor of all modern rockets and a direct predecessor of the
Saturn V moon rocket. Over 3,000 V-2s were launched as military rockets by the
German Wehrmacht against Allied targets in
World War II. As many as 20,000 died constructing V-2s and 7,000 died from the attacks themselves.
Developmental history
Following successes at
Kummersdorf with the first two
Aggregate series rockets,
Wernher von Braun and Walter Riedel began thinking of a much larger rocket in the summer of 1936
[ The Rocket Team, , Frederick I, III, Ordway, , , ]
based on a projected 25-metric-ton-thrust engine. After the
A-4 project was postponed after unfavorable aerodynamic stability testing of the
A-3 in July 1936,
[ V2--Der Schuss ins Weltall, , Walter, Dornberger, Bechtle Verlag, 1952 -- US translation ''V-2'' Viking Press:New York, 1954, ][ The Mare's Nest, , David, Irving, William Kimber and Co, 1964, ]
von Braun specified the A-4 performance in 1937,
[ The Peenemünde Raid: The Night of 17-18 August 1943, , Martin, Middlebrook, Bobs-Merrill, 1982, ]
and A-4 design and construction was ordered c1938/1939.
[ Space Travel: A History, , , Wernher von Braun & Frederick I. Ordway III, Harper & Row, 1985, ]
During September 28-30 1939, ''Der Tag der Weisheit'' (English: the day of wisdom) conference met at Peenemünde to initiate the funding of university research to solve rocket problems.
[3]
By late 1941, the
Army Research Center at Peenemünde possessed the technologies essential to the success of the A-4. The three key technologies for the A-4 were large liquid-fuel rocket engines, supersonic aerodynamics, and guidance and control.
[ The Rocket and the Reich: Peenemünde and the Coming of the Ballistic Missile Era, , Michael J, Neufeld, The Free Press, 1995, ]
In early September 1943, von Braun promised the Long-Range Bombardment Commission
[4] that the A-4 development was 'practically complete/concluded',
[5] but even by the middle of 1944, a complete A-4 parts list was still unavailable.
[4]
A production line was nearly ready at
Peenemünde when the
Operation Hydra attack caused the Germans to move production to the
Mittelwerk in the
Kohnstein.
Hitler's views
In his study of V2 Roy Irons: The price of vengeance found that at first "It was recognised by
Hitler that the rocket was neither sufficiently accurate, destructive or plentiful. The
Führer had horrified Dornberger in 1939 with his polite and unimpressed observation of the shattering power of the rocket motor. He was too astute, perhaps too conscious of his dignity, to be impressed by mere noise. Perhaps what impressed him was the foolish enthusiasm of others. In October 1942, before the catastrophic defeat at Stalingrad, he recognised both the failings of the rocket, and the burning enthusiasm of its promoters. By July 1943 the positions of 1939 were reversed; now Hitler needed to show that the war was still winnable, needed to keep his soldiers and people's belief in the victory, which had so slowly and narrowly slipped from his grasp. The film of the launch was decisive - but it might be guessed that the master of manipulation was really observing, not the film, but the ardent credulity in the faces of the others during the showing. What he discerned there was what had been missing in 1918 - a definite hope on the horizon, which would so enthuse and reinvigorate his knights and his pawns that they would willingly play their grandmaster's game to the bitter end."
[7]
Technical details
.svg.png)
Schematic diagram of a V-2 rocket.

Engine cut-out - 1
At launch the A-4 propelled itself for up to 65 seconds on its own power, and a program motor controlled the pitch to the specified angle at engine shutdown, from which the rocket continued on a free-fall () trajectory. The fuel and oxidizer pumps were steam turbines, and the steam was produced by concentrated
hydrogen peroxide with
potassium permanganate catalyst. Both the alcohol and oxygen tanks were an aluminium-magnesium alloy.
[8]
The combustion burner reached a temperature of 2500−2700 °C. The alcohol-water fuel was pumped along the double wall of the main combustion burner. This cooled the chamber and heated the fuel (
regenerative cooling). The fuel was then pumped into the main burner chamber through 1,224 nozzles, which assured the correct mixture of alcohol and oxygen at all times. Small holes also permitted some alcohol to escape directly into the combustion chamber, forming a cooled
boundary layer that further protected the wall of the chamber, especially at the throat where the chamber was narrowest. The boundary layer alcohol ignited in contact with the atmosphere, accounting for the long, diffuse exhaust plume. (Later, post-V2 engine designs not employing this alcohol boundary layer cooling show a translucent plume with
shock diamonds.)
The V-2 was guided by four external rudders on the tail fins, and four internal
graphite vanes at the exit of the motor. The LEV-3 guidance system consisted of two free
gyroscopes (a horizon and a verticant) for lateral stabilization, and a gyroscopic accelerometer connected to an electrolytic integrator (engine cut-off occurred when a thin coating of silver was electrochemically eroded off of a poorly conducting base).
Some later V-2s used "guide beams" (radio signals transmitted from the ground) to navigate towards the target, but the first models used a simple
analog computer that adjusted the
azimuth for the rocket, and the flying distance was controlled by the moment of engine cut-off, ''"Brennschluss"'', ground controlled by a Doppler system or by different types of on-board integrating accelerometers. The rocket stopped accelerating and soon reached the top of the (approximately
parabolic) flight curve.
The painting of the operational V-2s was mostly a
camouflage ragged pattern with several variations, but at the end of the war a plain olive green rocket also appeared. During tests, the rocket was painted in a characteristic black-and-white
chessboard pattern, which aided in determining if the rocket was spinning around its longitudinal axis.
The rocket reached a height of 80
km (50
miles) before shutting off engine.
[9]

Gyroscope from a V-2 rocket.
Production
Initially the production process occurred at
Peenemünde. From January 1944 to April 1945 about 6,000 V-2 rockets were built at
Mittelbau-Dora. 20,000 forced labor workers died there, and more than 7000 were killed by the missiles themselves.
The original idea for use of slave workers was
Hans Kammler's.
Launch sites
Initial plans for launch from massive underground
blockhouses at
Éperlecques La Coupole were dropped in favor of mobile launching. An entire convoy for the missile, men, equipment and fuel required about 30 trucks. The missile was delivered to a
staging area on a ''Vidalwagen'' (made by Vidal) and the local crews installed the
warhead. Launch teams then transferred the missile to a
Meillerwagen (made by Meiller) and towed it to the launch site. There it was erected onto the launch table, fuelled, armed, gyros were set and the rocket was fired. From arrival at a site to firing took about 90 minutes. The crew could leave the firing site within 30 minutes.
This was very successful, and an average of ten V-2s were launched per day, by far the most large rockets of a single type. After the war, estimates showed that up to 100 V-2s could be launched per day with these trailers, given sufficient supply of the rockets.
[10]
The missile could be launched practically anywhere, roads running through forests being a particular favorite. The system was so mobile and small that not one Meillerwagen was caught in action by Allied aircraft.
Peenemünde test launches
Notable test launches include the third test launch on
October 3 1942 (the first successful flight):
Two test launches were recovered by the Allies. The first was a launch on
June 13,
1944 with radio guidance for the
Wasserfall missile project. The second was a launch on 30 May 1944 from
Blizna that was
recovered by Polish resistance and transported to the UK during
Operation Most III.
Photo gallery
Operational history

The engine of a V-2 rocket.
The first unit to reach operational status was Batterie 444. On
September 2 1944 they formed up to launch attacks on
Paris, recently liberated, and eventually set up near
Houffalize in
Belgium. The next day the 485th moved to
The Hague for operations against
London. Several launch attempts over the next few days failed, but on
8 September both groups fired successfully.
Over the next few months the number of V-2s fired was at least 3,172, distributed over the various targets as follows:
★ At
Belgium : 1664
★
★
Antwerp 1610 (≈ 50% of the total)
★
★
Liege 27
★
★
Hasselt 13
★
★
Tournai 9
★
★
Mons 3
★
★
Diest 2
★ At
France : 76
★
★
Lille 25
★
★
Paris 22
★
★
Tourcoing 19
★
★
Arras 6
★
★
Cambrai 4
★ At
England : 1402
★
★
London 1358 (≈ 40% of the total)
★
★
Norwich/
Ipswich 44
★ At targets in
Germany : 11
★
★
Remagen 11
★ At the
Netherlands : 19
★
★
Maastricht 19
Hundreds more were launched that blew up in mid-flight, and never made it into allied statistics.
(Final development of the V-2 during the war was in fact to remedy this problem)
The final two exploded on (or near) their targets on
27 March 1945. The last British civilian killed was Mrs Ivy Millichamp, 34, in her home in Elm Grove,
Orpington. An estimated 2,754 civilians were killed in London by V-2 attacks with another 6,523 injured
[11]. This understates the potential of the V-2, since many rockets were mis-directed and exploded harmlessly. However, accuracy increased greatly over the course of the war, particularly on batteries where ''Leitstrahl-Guide Beam apparatus'' was installed, with V-2s sometimes landing within meters of the target.
[12] Accurately targeted missiles were often devastating, causing large numbers of deaths—about 160 in one explosion in a Woolworth's department store in
New Cross, south-east London and 567 deaths in a cinema in
Antwerp—and significant damage in the critically important Antwerp docks.
Silence
Because the V-2 traveled supersonically, it reached its target in silence, with a tell-tale whistling sound heard only after the explosion. To a civilian population inured to the idea that they might soon be blown up if they heard an enemy bomber or
V-1 flying bomb, this new mode of attack was disconcerting.
It also meant that when the attacks on London began in September 1944, the British government could keep them secret. Explosions could be attributed to other causes or to no particular cause. In this way the Germans were unable to be sure that their weapons were reaching England. The Germans themselves finally announced the V-2 on
8 November 1944 and only then, on
10 November 1944, did Winston Churchill inform Parliament, and the world, that England had been under rocket attack "for the last few weeks".
Countermeasures

Aftermath of a V-2 rocket attack on the main intersection in Antwerp, Belgium, November 27, 1944
Like the
V-1, the V-2 was immune to electronic countermeasures. Unlike the
V-1, the V-2's speed and trajectory made it invulnerable to anti-aircraft guns and fighters, as it dropped from an altitude of 100–110 km (60–70 miles) at up to four times the speed of sound. A plan was proposed whereby the missile would be detected by radar, its terminal trajectory calculated, and the area along that trajectory saturated by large-caliber anti-aircraft guns. The plan was dropped after
operations research indicated that the likely number of malfunctioning artillery shells falling to the ground would do more damage than the V-2 itself.
[13]
The only defences against the V-2 campaign were to destroy the launch infrastructure—expensive in terms of bomber resources and casualties—or to cause the Germans to "aim" at the wrong place through
disinformation. The British were able to convince the Germans to direct
V-1s and V-2s aimed at London to less populated areas east of the city. This was done by sending false impact reports via the German espionage network in Britain, which was controlled by the British (the
Double Cross System).
There is a record of one V-2, fortuitously observed at launch from a passing American
B-24 Liberator, being shot down by .50 caliber machine-gun fire.
[14]
Ultimately the most successful countermeasure was the Allied advance that forced the launchers back beyond range.
On
3 March 1945 the allies attempted to destroy V-2s and launching equipment near
The Hague by a large-scale bombardment, but due to navigational errors the
Bezuidenhout quarter was destroyed, killing 500 Dutch civilians.
Assessment
Despite being one of the most advanced weapons in
WWII, the V-2 was militarily ineffective. As it lacked a
proximity fuze, so it could not be set for
airburst; it buried itself in the target area before or just as the warhead detonated. This reduced its effectiveness. Furthermore its guidance systems were too primitive to hit specific targets, and its costs were approximately equivalent to four-engined bombers, which were more accurate (though only in a
relative sense), had longer ranges, carried many more warheads, and were reusable. Moreover, it diverted resources from other, more effective programmes. Nevertheless, it had a considerable psychological effect as, unlike bombing planes or the
V1 Flying Bomb, which made a characteristic buzzing sound, the V-2 travelled faster than the
speed of sound, with no warning before impact and no possibility of defense.
The cost of the V-2 program was approximately US$2 billion in 1944 dollars (approximately US$21 billion in 2005 dollars); and 6048 were built, 3225 launched (US$620,000 each in 2005 dollars). In fact the program can be seen as the German "
Manhattan Project", which cost US$2 billion in 1944 dollars (approximately US$20 billion in 2004 dollars).
To put the German effort to mass produce the V-2 in perspective, its cost was at the time estimated to be about 1,000,000
Reichsmark per rocket. This was about the same as four
Tiger Tanks or eight Panzer
Pzkfw IV tanks. For the 6000 V-2s built, Germany could have built up to 48,000 tanks. However, such comparisons of the opportunity cost of deploying the V2 versus other weapons systems need to consider the realities that Nazi Germany faced and the psychology of the senior Nazi leadership. For example, by late 1944 Nazi Germany did not have the fuel or qualified manpower to field an additional 48,000 tanks. The production of the fuel for one V-2 required 30 tons of
potatoes. Sometimes as Germany lacked enough explosives to put in the V-2, concrete was used and sometimes the Germans put in V-2s photographic propaganda of German citizens who had died in allied bombing. With the war all but lost, regardless of the factory output of conventional weapons, the Nazis resorted to V-weapons as a tenuous last hope to influence the war militarily (hence
Antwerp as V-2 target), as an extension of their desire to "punish" their foes and most importantly to give hope to their supporters with their
miracle weapon[15]. In short, the V-weapons were important to the Nazis even though they were civilian terror weapons with dubious military value.
The V-2's undeniable value, despite its overall ineffectiveness, was in its novelty as a weapon which set the stage for the next 50 years of ballistic military rocketry, culminating with ICBMs during the
Cold War.
Unfulfilled plans
A submarine-towed launch platform was tested successfully, effectively making it the prototype for
submarine-launched ballistic missiles. The project codename was
Prüfstand XII (Test stand XII), sometimes called the
rocket U-boat. If deployed, it would have allowed a
U-boat to launch V-2 missiles against United States cities, though only with considerable effort (and likely limited effect)
[7].
Twelve dismantled V-2 rockets were shipped to the Japanese. These left Bordeaux in August 1944 on transport U-boats
U-219 and
U-195 reaching
Djakarta in December 1944. A civilian V-2 expert was a VIP passenger on the
U-234 bound for
Japan in May 1945 when the war ended in
Europe. The fate of these V-2 rockets is unknown.
Near the end of the war, German scientists were working on chemical and possibly biological weapons to use in the V-2 program. By this stage, the Germans had produced munitions containing
nerve agents sarin,
soman and
tabun.
Post-war V-2 usage
At the end of the war, a race between the
United States and the
USSR to retrieve as many V-2 rockets and staff as possible began.
[16] Three hundred trainloads of V-2s and parts were captured and shipped to the
United States, and 126 of the principal designers, including both
Wernher von Braun and
Walter Dornberger were in American hands. In fact, Von Braun and his team made the conscious decision to surrender to the United States military to ensure they were not captured by the advancing Russians.
In the midst of this, in ''
Operation Backfire'' in October 1945 the British assembled a small number of V-2 missiles and launched three of them from a site in northern Germany. The engineers involved had already agreed to move to the US when the test firings were complete. The Backfire report remains the most extensive technical documentation of the rocket, including all support procedures, tailored vehicles and fuel composition. In his book ''My Father's Son'', Canadian author
Farley Mowat, then a member of the
Canadian Army, claims to have obtained a V-2 rocket in 1945 and shipped it back to Canada, where it is alleged to have ended up in the National Exhibition grounds in Toronto.

US test launch of a ''Bumper'' V-2.
Operation Paperclip recruited German engineers to the U.S., and
Special Mission V-2 transported V-2 parts to
White Sands Proving Grounds, from which programs with
animals in space and the
Bumper rocket were conducted.
The
USSR also captured a number of V-2s and staff, letting them set up in Germany for a time. The first work contracts were signed in the summer of 1945. In 1946 they were obliged to move to
Kapustin Yar in the USSR, where Groettrup headed up a group of just under 250 engineers. The first Soviet missile was the
R-1, an exact copy of the V-2.
Most of the German team was sent home after that project, but some remained to do research until as late as 1951.
Unbeknownst to the Germans, work immediately began on larger missiles, the R-2 and R-5, based on extension of the V-2 technology.
Post-war V-2s launched in secret from Peenemünde may have been responsible for a curious phenomenon known as
Ghost rockets, unexplained objects crossing the skies over Sweden and Finland.
In popular culture
★ The
Canadian Arrow, a competitor for the
Ansari X Prize, is based on the V-2.
★
Raymond Baxter (a famous RAF WW2 pilot and subsequent TV broadcaster), in an interview about his wartime career, he described flying over a V-2 rocket site during a launch, and his wingman firing on the missile: "I dread to think what would have happened if he'd hit the thing!"
★
Thomas Pynchon makes the V-2 rocket the central point of his post-modern novel
Gravity's Rainbow.
Model rockets
Model rocket V-2s are available in many sizes. For Germans, the 33-cm and 47-cm NORIS models are the best flying versions, because they can be launched without special permission with model rocket engines available in Germany.
Since the
1960s Estes Industries has released several versions of the V-2. Currently there are no Estes V-2s in production.
Surviving V-2 examples and components
The overview below includes some of the at least 20 V-2s still existing in
2005. Most, but not all, of the listed examples are on public display.
United Kingdom
★ One at the
Science Museum, London.
★ One at the
RAF Museum, London.
★ One (painted bright green, and cut through to display the engine and some other interior parts) at the
Imperial War Museum,
London (on loan from
Cranfield University).
★ One at the
RAF Museum at
RAF Cosford. In addition to the rocket, the museum holds many items of V-2 ancillary equipment, including a ''Meilerwagen'' transport and erection trailer, a ''Vidalwagen'' road transport trailer, a 15-ton ''Strabo'' gantry crane and a ''Abschussplattform'' (firing table) together with its towing dolly.
Australia
★ One at the
Australian War Memorial, Canberra, including complete Meillerwagen transporter. The rocket has the most complete set of guidance components of all surviving A4s. The Meillerwagen is the most complete of the three examples known to exist. Another A4 was on display at the RAAF Museum at Point Cook outside Melbourne. Both rockets now reside in Canberra.
United States
★ One (chessboard-painted) at the
Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in
Hutchinson, Kansas.
★ One at the
National Air and Space Museum,
Washington, D.C.
★ One at the
National Museum of the United States Air Force,
Dayton, Ohio.
★ One at the
Fort Bliss Air Defense Museum,
El Paso, Texas.
★ One at
White Sands Missile Range,
White Sands, New Mexico.
★ One at
Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama.
★ One at the
U.S. Space & Rocket Center in
Huntsville, Alabama.
★ One ''engine'' at the
U.S. Space & Rocket Center in
Huntsville, Alabama.
★ One ''engine'' at the
National Museum of the United States Air Force
★ One ''engine'' at the
Museum of Science and Industry in
Chicago.
★ One ''rocket body'' and one ''engine'' side by side (and exposed to the elements) outside the
US Army Ordnance Museum at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in
Aberdeen, Maryland.
Germany
★ One (1944, complete) at the
Deutsches Museum in
Munich (in the centre of the Museum's spiral staircase).
★ One ''engine'' (1944, cut through to reveal technical details) (also at the Deutsches Museum).
★ One ''engine'' at the Museum of Technology in
Berlin.
★ One ''replica'' at
The Peenemünde Historical and Technical Information Centre[17]
France
★ One ''engine'' at Cité de l'espace in
Toulouse.
★ V-2 display at '
La Coupole' museum, Wizernes, France (Pas de Calais, five kilometers from Saint-Omer).
See also
★
V-1 flying bomb
★
List of missiles
References
1. http://www.russianspaceweb.com/a4.html
2. ''Peenemuende,'' Walter Dornberger, Moewig, Berlin 1985. ISBN 3-8118-4341-9.
3. Ordway & Sharpe. 40
4. Neufeld. 224
5. Irving. 135
6. Neufeld. 224
7. Hitler's terror weapons by Roy Irons: The price of vengeance page 181
8. Kennedy.74
9. The History Channel V2 Factory: Nordhausen 070723
10. [3]
11. [4]
12. http://www.v2rocket.com/start/deployment/mobileoperations.html
13. [5]
14. [6]
15. Hitler's terror weapons by Roy Irons: The price of vengeance
16. "We Want with the West", ''Time Magazine,'' Dec. 9, 1946.
17. The Peenemünde replica incorporates many original components along with remanufactured ones and was put together by a group that included Peenemünde expert Reinhold Kruger, who worked as an apprentice at Peenemünde during the war.
Further reading
★ Dungan, Tracy D. (2005). ''V-2: A Combat History of the First Ballistic Missile.'' Westholme Publishing. ISBN 1-59416-012-0.
★ Gruntman, Mike ''Blazing the Trail: The Early History of Spacecraft and Rocketry'', AIAA, Reston, Va., 2004, ISBN 978-1-56347-705-8.
★
Road to Space. The First Thousand Years. The Early History of Rocketry and Space Exploration - video (1 hr 10 min)
★ Huzel, Dieter K. (ca. 1965). ''Peenemunde to Canaveral''. Prentice Hall Inc.
★ King, Benjamin and Timothy J. Kutta (1998). ''Impact: The History of Germany's V-Weapons in World War II ''. (Alternately: ''Impact: An Operational History of Germany's V Weapons in World War II''.) Rockville Center, New York: Sarpedon Publishers, 1998. ISBN 1-885119-51-8, ISBN 1-86227-024-4. Da Capo Press; Reprint edition, 2003: ISBN 0-306-81292-4.
★ Piszkiewicz, Dennis (1995). ''The Nazi Rocketeers: Dreams of Space and Crimes of War''. Westport, Conn.: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-95217-7.
External links
★
BBC: The hunt for Nazi scientists
★
History of Peenemünde and the discovery of the German missile development by the Allied
★
V-2 history page – from Canadian Arrow official website
★
Discussion of V-2 defences (pdf)
★
About effect of V2's on London