Automotive

Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts 

Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: Roscosmos

What you see here is a TREKOL amphibious truck based on an UAZ-31514. It costs $26,500 worth of rubles, and the Russian space program uses it to find the stages falling off their Soyuz rockets, no matter how far in the woods they end up.

http://truckyeah.jalopnik.com/why-the-russia…

On the 28th of April, Roscosmos launched a Soyuz-2.1a type rocket from their new ‘Eastern Spaceport’ that happens to be in Russia instead of Kazakhstan.

Advertisement

http://gizmodo.com/this-delayed-r…

The Soyuz is a three stage rocket, which means quite a few parts of it fall back to Earth without burning up during reentry. So far, Roscosmos’ search teams managed to find four bits of the puzzle, in remote locations in the Sakha Republic and the Amur Oblast. Local environmental experts also took samples from the crash sites to see whether the kerosene and oxygen based propulsion system had any impact on the soil or water.

Sponsored

To get there, the crews use helicopters as well as TREKOL’s amphibious trucks, based on the light and highly capable UAZ.

Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: TREKOL
Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: TREKOL
Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: TREKOL

As the search continues, Roscosmos will use drones and helicopters to find the rest of the metal and carbon fiber fragments before their scientist can have a look at them at the Vostochny Cosmodrome, the launch place that is scheduled to be ready in 2018, ending the Russian space program’s dependence on Kazakhstan once and for all.

After that, all what’s left of the Soyuz 2.1a gets recycled, just like an old plane.

Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: Roscosmos
Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: Roscosmos
Russians Use These Amphibious 4x4s To Find Their Lost Rocket Parts
Photo credit: Roscosmos

All I can tell you is this: If you’re out there in the Russian wilderness huntin’, fishin’ or fourwheelin’, always be vigilant.

Advertisement

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Popular

To Top