The first vertical rocket launch with a human on board resulted in a fatality.Lothar Sieber, a test pilot for Nazi Germany, was launched vertically with booster rockets on an experimental interceptor aircraft, the Natter Ba 349A M23, that was effectively intended to be a short-range human-piloted surface-to-air missile. On the first and only test flight of this aricraft, on March 1, 1945, one of the rocket boosters did not separate as planned and the aircraft inverted and impacted the ground 7 km away from the launch site. As far as I can tell, the first person to survive a vertical rocket launch was Yuri Gagarin, 16 years later. The intervening years had several human-piloted rocket-powered aircraft (like the X-15), but these were launched either horizontally or by being dropped from airplanes. There were quite a lot of suborbital (and one orbital, with Laika) rocket flights with animals on board, but I can't find a mention of any with a human on board.Am I missing out on any sub-orbital yet historical firsts? Does anyone know?
ME-163 Komet*snip*
Quote from: Rocket Science on 04/26/2019 08:49 pmME-163 Komet*snip*That would fall in the horizontal-launched category.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 04/26/2019 08:55 pmQuote from: Rocket Science on 04/26/2019 08:49 pmME-163 Komet*snip*That would fall in the horizontal-launched category.Could go vertical. But I believe you are looking along the family of piloted A4 A9-A10 most likely...
The legendary Wan Hu
The first human launch vertical with rocket was Lothar SieberOn March 1, 1945, he was launch on board of a Bachem Ba 349 „Natter“Sadly he not survived first launch of this rocket powered interceptor
Quote from: Rocket Science on 04/26/2019 08:59 pmQuote from: whitelancer64 on 04/26/2019 08:55 pmQuote from: Rocket Science on 04/26/2019 08:49 pmME-163 Komet*snip*That would fall in the horizontal-launched category.Could go vertical. But I believe you are looking along the family of piloted A4 A9-A10 most likely...Still took off from runway
The entire Natter concept bordered on craziness... Me-163 was crazy, but the Natter, an expendable Me-163 ?