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Final Titan II launches

  • Published Oct. 20, 2003
  • By Staff Sgt. Rebecca DanĂ©t
  • 30th Space Wing Public Affairs
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AFPN) --   The Air Force's 13th and final Titan II rocket launched a Defense Meteorological Satellite Program payload from here Oct. 18 at 9:17 a.m.

The launch took place following two recent delays.

The mission was delayed Oct. 15 when an air-conditioning duct became detached from the booster's payload fairing. The fairing surrounds the satellite atop the rocket. The duct is required to maintain environmental conditions for the satellite before launch.

It was delayed again Oct. 16 by an alarm on the booster's guidance system, but workers tested the alarm and cleared the rocket for the Oct. 18 launch.

This mission, dubbed G-9, carried the 4,200-pound payload into low-orbit approximately 458 nautical miles above Earth. The payload is one in a constellation of satellites that monitors the Earth's atmosphere and oceans providing real-time weather information to warfighters worldwide.

Now that the Titan II has completed its last successful launch, officials said plans are under way to deactivate the launch pad with the mobile service and umbilical towers slated for destruction in 2007.

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  • Titan II blasts its way into history

    Oct. 24, 2003
    As the final Titan II rocket streaked skyward from here Oct. 18, it left in its wake a 40-year history that included a transformation from intercontinental ballistic missile to space booster.The two-stage, liquid-propelled, silo-based Titan II was developed for the United States' budding ICBM
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