RD-861
The RD-861 is a Soviet liquid propellant rocket engine burning a hypergolic mixture of unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine fuel with dinitrogen tetroxide oxidizer in a gas generator combustion cycle. It has a main combustion chamber, with four vernier nozzles fed by the gas generator output. It can be reignited a single time.
History
When the Soviet military developed the Fractional [Orbital Bombardment System], Yangel's OKB-586 proposed a new version of their R-36 ICBM, called the R-36-ORB. It incorporated an orbital warhead called OGCh, for which the RD-854 engine was developed in-house. Since the Outer [Space Treaty] of 1967 banned nuclear weapons in Earth orbit, but did not ban the launch systems, the Soviet Union proceeded to test their FOBS albeit without placing nuclear warheads in orbit.Versions
There are three versions of this engine:- RD-854 : First developed as the third stage engine for the R-36ORB Fractional Orbital [Bombardment System|FOBS].
- RD-861 : Also known as the D-25. It was the engine of the Tsyklon-3 third stage.
- RD-861K : An improved RD-861, developed for the third stage of the Tsyklon-4. The vernier nozzles were replaced with a hydraulic actuated gimbal for the whole engine. The isp was increased, the burn time tripled and the reignitions increased to three.