The first stage is cylindrical in shape, and . It has an empty weight of , carries of methane and oxygen, and a gross lift-off weight (GLOW) of , including the second stage. It is fitted with five RL-60 and 4
RL-10 sustainer engines, and 4 small jet landing engines, all modified to burn methane. At launch it is mounted on four internal launch-rails fitted with pneumatic shock absorbers, rather than locked to the launch frame with explosive bolts. Allowing the DH-1 to rise as soon as thrust exceeds weight avoids sudden shock loads and allows it to settle back onto the launch frame in the event of critical engine failure in the first few meters of flight. Flight is functionally similar to the
DC-X. At launch all 9 rockets are fired until the DH-1 reaches 100,000 feet (~30 km). At that point the RL-60s are shut down and the sustainer engines push the rocket up to 200,000 ft (~60 km) where separation occurs. The first stage flight profile is almost entirely vertical, with only slight sideways motion to keep above the launch/landing area. The first stage then drops back to the launch site, experiencing reentry heating roughly comparable to the SR-71, releasing a drogue chute at 120,000 ft, and decelerating and landing propulsively with 30 seconds reserve fuel on the jet engines. ==Second stage==