KVD-1
| Country of origin | USSR/Russia | 
|---|---|
| First flight | 2001-04-20, GSAT-1 Mission, GSLV debut flight | 
| Last flight | 2010-12-25, GSAT-5P launch, GSLV Mk I final flight | 
| Designer | KB KhIMMASH | 
| Application | Upper stage engine | 
| Associated LV | GSLV Mk 1 | 
| Status | Retired | 
| Liquid-fuel engine | |
| Propellant | Liquid oxygen / liquid hydrogen | 
| Mixture ratio | 6 | 
| Cycle | Staged combustion | 
| Configuration | |
| Chamber | 1 + 2 verniers | 
| Performance | |
| Thrust, vacuum | 69.6 kN (15,600 lbf) | 
| Chamber pressure | 5.6 MPa (810 psi) | 
| Specific impulse, vacuum | 462 s | 
| Burn time | 800 s (600 s in a single burn) | 
| Gimbal range | None; uses 2 vernier engines for attitude control | 
| Dimensions | |
| Length | 2.14 m (7 ft 0 in) | 
| Diameter | 1.58 m (5 ft 2 in) | 
| Dry mass | 282 kg (622 lb) | 
| References | |
| References | |
KVD-1 was an upper stage LOX/LH2 cryogenic engine developed by the Isayev Design Bureau (now KB KhIMMASH) of Russia in the early 1960s. It is a modified version of the RD-56, developed for a never-completed cryogenic upper stage of the N-1 super-heavy lift rocket, with the goal of enabling crewed lunar missions by the USSR. The KVD-1 produces a thrust of 7.5 tonnes.