Vanguard SLV-6
Vanguard SLV-6, also called Vanguard Satellite Launch Vehicle-Six, hoped to be the third successful flight of the American Vanguard rocket following the successful Vanguard 2 satellite on rocket Vanguard SLV-4. Vanguard Satellite Launch Vehicle-6 was designed to carry a small spherical satellite into Earth orbit to study solar heating of Earth and the heat balance. A faulty second stage pressure valve caused a mission failure.
Launch vehicle
Vanguard was the designation used for both the launch vehicle and the satellite. The first stage of the three-stage Vanguard Test Vehicle was powered by a General Electric X-405 thrust liquid rocket engine, propelled by kerosene and liquid oxygen, with helium pressurant. It was finless, tall, in diameter, and had a launch mass of approximately.The second stage was a high, of diameter Aerojet General AJ-10 liquid engine burning Unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine and White Inhibited Fuming Nitric Acid with a helium pressurant tank. It produced a thrust of and had a launch mass of approximately. This stage contained the complete guidance and control system.
A solid-propellant rocket with of thrust was developed by the Grand Central Rocket Company to satisfy third-stage requirements. The stage was high, in diameter, and had a launch mass of. The thin steel casing for the third stage had a hemispherical forward dome with a shaft at the center to support the satellite and an aft dome fairing into a steel exit nozzle.
The total height of the vehicle with the satellite fairing was about. The payload capacity was to a Earth orbit. A nominal launch would have the first stage bringing the rocket to an altitude of, followed by the second stage to, whereupon the third stage would bring the satellite to orbit. This was the same launch vehicle configuration, with minor modifications, as used for Vanguard TV-3 and all succeeding Vanguard flights up to this one.