LEK Lunar Lander Lunar lander of the Lunar Expeditionary Complex (LEK). |
AKA: Lunniy ekspeditionniy korabl'. Status: Study 1973. Gross mass: 31,000 kg (68,000 lb). Height: 9.70 m (31.80 ft). Span: 11.30 m (37.00 ft).
It would then descend to the lunar surface using a landing stage nearly identical to the American lunar module descent stage.
This landing stage however would primarily provide propulsion of the upper Ascent/earth recovery stage to a trans-earth trajectory. The Ascent/earth recovery stage consisted of a re-entry capsule in the shape of but larger than the Soyuz descent module, encapsulated in a larger pressurized volume providing crew quarters and equipment storage.
Crew Size: 3. Orbital Storage: 365 days.
LEK Model Model of LEK in Energia museum - unusual re-entry capsule or subsidiary module at its top. Credit: Andy Salmon |
LEK Lunar Lander LEK LK moon lander Vulkan-launched Credit: © Mark Wade |
LEK - Vulkan LEK - Vulkan-launched version Credit: © Mark Wade |
Vulkan LEK Vulkan launched Lunar Expeditionary Complex compared with N1-L3 Credit: © Mark Wade |
Mishin and Barmin, using budget provided by the Ministry of Defence, had designed a lunar base for launch by the N1 in 1969-1974. After the cancellation of the N1, Glushko pleaded with the Military-Industrial Commission for the work to be taken from Barmin and be given to NPO Energia. Glushko's alternative, Vulkan-launched base was elaborated within his bureau. Bushuyev developed spacecraft for the base. Prudnikova developed a modular lunar city, with living modules, factory modules, a nuclear reactor power module, and a lunar crawler with a 200 km radius of action. The project work was only finally cancelled after the Apollo-Soyuz flights.
Bushuyev tells Chertok that the lunar base work did not interest Glushko. The VPK Military-Industrial Commission was only interested in duplicating the American shuttle, not in any other ventures in space. With the N1-Sr booster, Russia could have had a six man lunar base established with 8 to 10 launches in the late 1970's. Bushuyev died on 26 October 1978, having seen his dream completely tossed away.
An expert commission led by Keldysh examines the plan for a lunar base launched by the Vulkan booster. The plan is completely rejected. NPO Energia was told to quit dreaming and devote itself only to projects with national economic importance, like Buran. This put a definitive end to Glushko's lunar base projects studied in 1976-1978. But he just waited and started design work again on a lunar base using the Energia launch vehicle after the first Buran launch in 1988.