| Titan II | ||
|---|---|---|
| Stages | 2 | |
| 1 - 1st Stage | Engines | LR87-AJ-5 |
| Thrust | 430,000 lbf (1,900 kN) | |
| Burn time | 156 seconds | |
| Fuels | A-50 hydrazine/N204 | |
| 2 - 2nd Stage | Engine | LR91-AJ-5 |
| Thrust | 100,000 lbf (445 kN) | |
| Burn time | 180 seconds | |
| Fuels | A-50 hydrazine/N204 | |
| ICBM & Launch Vehicle | 1st Launch April, 1962 | |
| Payload LEO | 8,250 lb (3,750 kg) | |
| Payload Escape | 500 lb (227 kg) | |
The Titan II space launch vehicle is a two-stage liquid fueled booster, designed to provide a small-to-medium weight class capability. It is able to lift approximately 4,200 pounds (1,900 kg) into a polar low-Earth circular orbit. The first stage consists of a ground ignited LR87 liquid propellant rocket, while the second stage consists of a LR91 liquid propellant rocket.
The Titan rocket family was established in October 1955, when the Air Force awarded Lockheed Martin (formerly the Martin Company) a contract to build an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). It became known as the Titan I, the nation’s first two-stage ICBM and first underground silo-based ICBM. More than 140 Titan II ICBMs, once the vanguard of America’s strategic deterrent force, were built. Titan IIs also were flown in NASA’s Gemini manned space program in the mid-1960s.
The Titan II space-launch vehicles are decommissioned ICBMs that have been refurbished and equipped with hardware required for use as space launch vehicles. The Martin Marietta Astronautics Group was awarded a contract in January 1986 to refurbish, integrate, and launch fourteen Titan II ICBMs for government space launch requirements. The Air Force successfully launched the first Titan II space launch vehicle from Vandenberg AFB September 5, 1988. NASA’s Clementine spacecraft, which was launched aboard a Titan II in January 1994, discovered water on the moon in November 1996.
A single missile still rests in its silo (without the warhead) and is open to the public as the Titan Missile Museum at Sahuarita, Arizona.
Space launch vehicles | Gemini program | Intercontinental ballistic missiles of the United States | United States Air Force guided missiles | Lockheed Martin
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