heavy-lift launch vehicle
From Spacefaring
Q11222716
Q11222716
A heavy-lift launch vehicle (HLV) is an orbital launch vehicle capable of lifting payloads between 20,000 to 50,000 kg or between 20,000 to 100,000 kilograms into low Earth orbit (LEO). Heavy-lift launch vehicles often carry payloads into higher-energy orbits, such as geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO) or heliocentric orbit (HCO). An HLV is between a medium-lift launch vehicle and a super heavy-lift launch vehicle.
Wikimedia, Wikidata
HLLV, HLV
payload mass 20000 kilogram, payload mass 100000 kilogram, payload mass 50000 kilogram,
Dong Fang Hong 2, Miura Next, New Glenn, Zhuque-3, Republic of Haiti, Vulcan, Terran R, Saturn IB, Proton-M, Long March 5, Long March 5, launch vehicle, Ekran, Falcon Heavy, DIRECT, Delta IV Heavy, Angara-A5, Tarshish, Sikh Confederacy, Persia, Kingdom of Wolaita, Kingdom of Martabam-hongsawatoi, Havilah, Chinland, Calvinist Republic of Ghent, Ashkenaz,
-
Location: KML, Cluster Map, Maps,
-

Angara-A5 ⓘ
Russian heavy-lift launch vehicle -

DIRECT ⓘ
proposed heavy lift launch vehicle -

Miura Next ⓘ
orbital recoverable heavy-lift launch vehicle under development by Spanish company PLD Space -

Saturn IB ⓘ
American launch vehicle -

Zhuque-3 ⓘ
orbital heavy-lift launch vehicle from the Chinese company LandSpace -

Delta IV Heavy ⓘ
retired expendable launch system in the Delta rocket family -

Proton-M ⓘ
Russian heavy lift launch vehicle -

Long March 5 ⓘ
Chinese launch vehicle -

Long March 5 ⓘ
Chinese next-generation heavy lift launch system -

Falcon Heavy ⓘ
heavy-lift orbital launch vehicle made by SpaceX -

Vulcan ⓘ
United Launch Alliance launch vehicle -

New Glenn ⓘ
orbital launch vehicle developed by Blue Origin -

Terran R ⓘ
partially-reusable launch vehicle in-development by Relativity Space
| Type | Subtype | Date | Description | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| class | rocket | Angara-A5 | Angara, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata | |
| class | rocket | DIRECT | heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata | |
| class | rocket | Miura Next | two-stage-to-orbit, reusable launch vehicle, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata | |
| class | rocket | Saturn IB | Saturn, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata | |
| class | rocket | Zhuque-3 | two-stage-to-orbit, reusable launch vehicle, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata | |
| class | rocket | 2004 | Delta IV Heavy | Delta, liquid-propellant rocket, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2005 | Proton-M | Proton, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2016 | Long March 5 | heavy-lift launch vehicle, Long March 5 | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2016 | Long March 5 | Long March, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2018 | Falcon Heavy | Falcon 9, heavy-lift launch vehicle, super heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2024 | Vulcan | heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2025 | New Glenn | reusable launch vehicle, two-stage-to-orbit, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| class | rocket | 2026 | Terran R | reusable launch vehicle, two-stage-to-orbit, heavy-lift launch vehicle | Wikidata |
| commons | image | Maria-manifolden | Commons | ||
