All rights to sell and employ the RD-253 for
Proton rocket are held by
Energomash which produces it in
Perm,
Russia. The modification
RD-275 (14D14) appeared as the result of development in 1987–1993, with the purpose to achieve a more powerful version of the engine. Its 7.7% higher thrust was reached by raising pressure in the
combustion chamber and enabled an increase of
payload mass to
geostationary orbit (GEO) up to more than . The successful maiden flight of a
Proton rocket with the new engine was completed in 1995.
Energomash started the development of next more powerful version of engine in 2001. It has 5.2% higher thrust and has the designation 14D14M (
RD-275M). It was designed to allow the rocket to deliver more payload to
GEO. In the period from 2002 to 2003 years some experimental work was completed with this version of the engine. It included four test firings of three experimental RD-275M with a total time of 735
s. In the middle of 2005, this engine went into production by government commission. The first launch of a
Proton-M with 14D14M engines was launched on July 7, 2007. The final version RD-275M is sometimes designated as RD-276, but through 2009 the name RD-275M (14D14M) was more common. Some sources points out the cost of production per engine as much as 1.5 million
USD and sometimes calls some lower figures around 1 million
USD per unit. == Versions ==