Titan I launch from LC-16 |
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Launch site | Cape Canaveral Air Force Station |
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Short name | LC-16 |
Operator | US Air Force |
Total launches | 141 |
Launch pad(s) | One |
Launch history | |
Status | Inactive |
First launch | 12 December 1959 |
Last launch | 21 March 1988 |
Associated rockets | Titan I Titan II MGM-31 Pershing |
Launch Complex 16 (LC-16) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida is a launch complex built for use by LGM-25 Titan missiles, and later used for NASA operations before being transferred back to the US military and used for tests of MGM-31 Pershing missiles. Six Titan I missiles were launched from the complex between December 1959 and May 1960. These were followed by seven Titan II missiles, starting with the type's maiden flight on 16 March 1962. The last Titan II launch from LC-16 was conducted on 29 May 1963.
Following the end of its involvement with the Titan missile, LC-16 was transferred to NASA, which used it for Gemini crew processing, and static firing tests of the Apollo Service Module's propulsion engine. Following its return to the US Air Force in 1972, it was converted for use by the Pershing missile, which made its first flight from the complex on 7 May 1974. Seventy nine Pershing IA and 49 Pershing II missiles were launched from LC-16. The last Pershing launch from the facility was conducted on 21 March 1988. It was deactivated the next day and subsequently decommissioned under the Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty.
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