. The most prominent feature of the facility is the
rail system (similar in appearance to railroad tracks) used to launch
rocket-powered test vehicles known as "
sleds". The rail system is located just east of the
White Sands National Park, and consists of a concrete foundation known as the girder that supports the two primary rails and a single tertiary rail. The westernmost rail is known as "A rail", followed by the adjacent "B rail" and "C rail". The alignment of the rails is nearly north–south. All three rails are fabricated from heavy-duty crane rail () and are maintained to an alignment of no more than deviation from a nominal reference line between rail tiedowns. A and B rails constitute the primary rails and are long. C rail, located at the north end of the track facility, is long. A and B rails are spaced , center to center, while C rail is spaced to the east of B rail. Despite the simple appearance of the setup, the tracks constitute the straightest system of track ever laid. Rails A, B, and C are continuously
welded and pre-
stressed to be under
tension at temperatures below . Within the HHSTT infrastructure, there is a rainfield that is used to study the erosive effects caused by the impact of raindrops on material samples or components of weapon systems carried on rocket sleds. The rainfield system has been characterized for droplet size distribution and can simulate various combinations of rain environments from light rain to heavy rain, and produce flight conditions ranging from
subsonic to
hypersonic. This capability is used both for material development (usually involving systematic testing of material samples) and for qualifying flight hardware. A separate system is currently under construction to support
magnetic levitation, or maglev, sled development. The reason for this system is to produce flight-like
vibration environments that can not be achieved on the main steel rail track. This system performed its first test in 2012 and continues to be operational. Other facilities at the HHSTT include fabrication shops, project management and engineering buildings,
munitions storage buildings, and heavy equipment staging areas. ==Data collection==