Didn't see any notice here of this test -- apparently the first full length URM-1 firing, some 200+ seconds, and a success.http://www.khrunichev.ru/main.php?id=1&nid=1320Khrunichev chief designer Yuri Bakhvalov is in one of the candid shots. You can see his name on his badge.
Test launches of Russia's new booster rocket, the Angara, are to start in 2013, the rocket designer said on Thursday.Vladimir Nesterov, head of the Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center, said the rocket assembly would be completed in the first quarter of 2011, adding that the first-stage engine was "99% ready" and the second-stage engine had already been tested three times.He said the only problem that could affect the schedule of tests was delays in the purchase of ground-based equipment that the center was unable to order due to underfunding.Angara rockets, designed to provide lifting capabilities between 2,000 and 40,500 kg into low earth orbit, are expected to become the core of Russia's unmanned launcher fleet, replacing several existing systems.The main purpose of the Angara rocket family is to give Russia independent access to space. The rockets will reduce Russia's dependence on the Baikonur space center it leases from Kazakhstan by allowing the launch of heavy payloads from more northerly sites such as Plesetsk and a new space center in Russia's Far East.Khrunichev is also developing a super-heavy-lift version, the Angara 7, capable of orbiting payloads of 45 to 75 tons, and for which there is no equivalent in Russia's current rocket fleet.MOSCOW, July 15 (RIA Novosti)
http://www.khrunichev.ru/main.php?id=1&nid=2012The first (suborbital) launch of Angara-1.2PP rocket is planned in the second quarter 2013, the first (orbital) launch of Angara-A5 - in the fourth quarter 2013.
A7 is designed with a larger diameter core, which is still barely railroad-compatible. Probably same size as Rus-M core or similar. It should be enough for clean separation or the 6 URM-1.
1154 tonnes launch mass.Launch thrust must be at least 1,300 tonnes then. 40.5 tonnes to low earth orbit? Wow.That's better than the Falcon 9 Heavy capability.