Agate (rocket)

VE 110 Agate is the designation of an unguided French test rocket developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Agate
Agate VE 110
FunctionSounding rocket
ManufacturerSEREB
Country of originFrance
Size
Height8.50 metres (27.9 ft)
Diameter0.80 metres (2.6 ft)
Mass3,200 kilograms (7,100 lb)
Stages1
Associated rockets
Derivative workRubis, Diamant
Launch history
StatusRetired
Launch sitesCIEES/CERES Ile du Levant
Total launches12
Success(es)11
Failure(s)1
First flightJune 3, 1961
Last flightApril 20, 1964
First stage
Powered byNA801 Mammouth
Maximum thrust186 kilonewtons (42,000 lbf)
PropellantSolid

It was part of the Pierres précieuses (fr.: gemstones) program, that included five prototypes Agathe, Topaze, Emeraude, Rubis and Saphir, leading up to the Diamant orbital rocket.

The Agate has a length of 8.50 metres, a diameter of 0.80 metres, a start mass of 3.2 tonnes, a takeoff thrust of 186 kN and a ceiling of 20 km. It used a NA801 Mammouth solid propellant rocket engine (same as the Rubis VE-210).

The initial version was designated VE (Véhicule Expérimental) 110, while the VE 110RR version was used to develop recovery procedures at sea. The name indicates that it is a "Véhicule Expérimental" (Experimental Vehicle) with 1 stage, using solid propulsion (code 1), and not guided (code 0).

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