LR89

The Rocketdyne LR89 was a liquid-fueled rocket engine developed in the 1950s by Rocketdyne, a division of North American Aviation. It was designed to serve as a booster engine the Atlas rocket family.[1][2][3][4] The LR89 was a liquid oxygen (LOX) and RP-1 (kerosene) engine.[5]

It was used in configurations where it worked alongside the LR105 sustainer engine to enhance thrust in the first stage of the Atlas, being jettisoned when the vehicle weight had been considerably reduced due to propellant consumption.[5][6]

Description

The LR89 was part of a family of engines that Rocketdyne developed to power the first American ICBMs and satellite launch vehicles.[7][8] It was a gas-generator cycle engine, in which a portion of the fuel and oxidizer is burned to drive a turbine, which powers the fuel pumps, and featured a hypergolic igniter.[9]

Versions

The LR89 engine underwent several upgrades throughout its operational life, resulting in multiple versions:[10][5][9][2]

Atlas stage

The LR89 powered the first Atlas stage, in different configurations:[13][5][14]

  • MA-1 (booster only): two XLR89-1 booster engines and two LR101 vernier engines. Used on Atlas A;[15]
  • MA-1: two XLR89-1 booster engines, an LR105-3 sustainer, and two LR101 vernier engines. Used on Atlas B and Atlas C missiles;
  • MA-2: two XLR89-5 booster engines, an LR105-5 sustainer, and two LR101 vernier engines. Used on Atlas D and Atlas LV-3B;[16]
  • MA-3: two LR89-5 booster engines, an LR105-5 sustainer, and two LR101 vernier engines. Used on Atlas E, Atlas F and Atlas E/F;[17]
  • MA-5: two LR89-7 booster engines, an LR105-5 sustainer, and two LR101 vernier engines. Used on Atlas SLV3, Atlas H, Atlas LV3C, Atlas G and Atlas I.

See also

References

  1. Rocket Engine Evolution National Museum of the USAF^
  2. Technical Manual: Rocket Engine, USAF Model LR89-NA-5 (Rocketdyne) National Air and Space Museum, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  3. LR-89 (Atlas Booster) Engine heroicrelics.org, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  4. George P. Sutton. Rocket Propulsion Elements John Wiley & Sons, 2016^
  5. Rocket Propulsion Evolution:5 - Atlas Missile www.enginehistory.org, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  6. LR-89 (Atlas Booster) Rocket Engine Injector heroicrelics.org, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  7. Robert Clark. The First Atlas Test Flights Drew Ex Machina, 2015-06-11, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  8. Chuck Walker. Atlas: The Ultimate Weapon Apogee Books, 2005^
  9. Mark Wade. LR89-5 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  10. Mark Wade. XLR89-1 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  11. Mark Wade. XLR89-5 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  12. Mark Wade. LR89-7 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  13. Gunter D. Krebs. Atlas Family Gunter's Space Page, 2024, retrieved 2024-10-13^
  14. Atlas MA engine series www.astronautix.com, retrieved 2025-09-14^
  15. Atlas A stage www.astronautix.com, retrieved 2025-09-14^
  16. Atlas MA-2 www.astronautix.com, retrieved 2025-09-14^
  17. Atlas MA-3 www.astronautix.com, retrieved 2025-09-14^