Category
page 1Rocket launchers

Panzerschreck
Panzerschreck ( "tank's dread" or "tank's bane") was the popular name for the '''Raketenpanzerbüchse 54' ("Rocket Anti-armor Rifle Model 54", abbreviated to RPzB 54), an 88 mm reusable anti-tank rocket launcher developed by Nazi Germany in World War II. Another earlier, official name was Ofenrohr'' ("stove pipe").
rocket launcher
device for launching rockets
launch pad
facility from which rockets are launched
transporter erector launcher
self-transported long range missile system

Gyrojet
The Gyrojet is a family of unique firearms developed in the 1960s named for the method of gyroscopically stabilizing its projectiles. Rather than inert bullets, Gyrojets fire small rockets called Microjets which have little recoil and do not require a heavy barrel or chamber to resist the pressure of the combustion gases. Velocity on leaving the tube was very low, but increased to around at . The result is a very lightweight and transportable weapon.
bō-hiya
thumb|300px|An Edo period wood block print showing samurai gunners firing bo-hiya with hiya-zutsu (rocket guns)

Walid
armored personnel carrier by the Arab Organization for Industrialization
Ariane flight VA256
launch of an Ariane 5 carrying the James Webb Space Telescope
Jobaria Defense Systems Multiple Cradle Launcher
Emirati multiple rocket launcher with 240 launch tubes
N-2
The N-2 is an Armenian multiple rocket launcher designed and produced by the Scientific Production Association Garni-Ler starting no later than 2011. Armenia has not released much information regarding the rocket system, however it is apparent that the N-2 is being mass-produced, and is in active use by the Armenian Armed Forces, and likely the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army. The system was developed onto the GAZ-3308, a Russian military truck. The launcher is mainly used with Armenian TB-1 thermobaric missiles and RPG-7 grenades, but is designed to be compatible with a wide variety of ammuniti