Cape Canaveral Space Launch Complex 17

Space Launch Complex 17[1][2] (SLC-17), previously designated Launch Complex 17 (LC-17), was a launch site at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida used for Thor and Delta rocket launches between 1958 and 2011.

Space Launch Complex 17
Delta II rocket with the THEMIS spacecraft atop ready for launch on Pad 17B on February 16, 2007
Launch siteCape Canaveral Air Force Station
Location28°26′48″N 80°33′58″W
Short nameSLC-17
OperatorUnited States Air Force / NASA
Total launches325
Launch pad(s)Two
Orbital inclination
range
28°-57°
SLC-17A launch history
StatusDemolished
Launches161
First launch30 August 1957
PGM-17 Thor
Last launch17 August 2009
Delta II / GPS IIR-M8
Associated
rockets
PGM-17 Thor
Thor-Able
Thor-Delta
Thor DSV-2D
Delta A/B/C/D/E/G/L/M/N
Delta 2000
Delta 3000
Delta II 6000/7000
SLC-17B launch history
StatusDemolished
Launches164
First launch25 January 1957
PGM-17 Thor
Last launch10 September 2011
Delta II / GRAIL
Associated
rockets
PGM-17 Thor
Thor-Ablestar
Thor-Delta
Thor DSV-2F
Thor DSV-2G
Delta A/B/C/E/G
Delta 1000
Delta 2000
Delta 3000
Delta 4000
Delta II 6000/7000/H
Delta III 8000

It was built in 1956 for use with the PGM-17 Thor missile, the first operational ballistic missile in the arsenal of the United States. More recently the launch complex has been used for vehicles in the Delta rocket family, derived from the Thor missile, to launch probes to the Moon and planets, solar observatories and weather satellites.

SLC-17 features two expendable launch vehicle (ELV) launch pads, 17A and 17B. The pads were operated by the US Air Force's 45th Air Wing and have supported more than 300 Department of Defense, NASA and commercial missile and rocket launches. Following the last military launch, in August 2009, SLC-17A was withdrawn from use, and SLC-17B was transferred to NASA for two remaining launches.

Pad 17A supported its first Thor missile launch on 3 August 1957, and Pad 17B supported its first Thor launch on 25 January 1957. The site was upgraded in the early 1960s to support a variety of more modern ELVs, which were derived from the basic Thor booster. The modern ELVs based on Thor came to be called the Delta family of rockets.

Thirty-five early Delta rocket missions were launched from Complex 17 between the beginning of 1960 and the end of 1965. At that time the complex was operated by the US Air Force. The US Air Force transferred Complex 17 to NASA in 1965, but the site was returned to the US Air Force in 1988 to support the Delta II program.

As Delta II launches continued over the next decades, Pad 17B was modified in 1997 to support a new, more powerful launch vehicle, the Delta III, which made its maiden flight from the complex on 26 August 1998. The launch ended in failure, as did a second launch the next year. After a third launch on 23 August 2000 placed a mass simulator into a lower than planned orbit, the program was abandoned.

Among the major NASA missions launched from the complex were the Explorer and Pioneer space probes, all of the Orbiting Solar Observatories, the Solar Maximum Mission, Biological Satellites (Biosatellite program), the International Cometary Explorer, the TIROS and GOES meteorology satellites, and the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity.

On 10 September 2011, a Delta II 7920H-10C made the final launch from Space Launch Complex 17B, carrying NASA's GRAIL spacecraft. All remaining Delta II launches were made from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

At 7:00 a.m. EDT (11:00 UTC) on 12 July 2018, both launch towers had been demolished via controlled demolition to make way for Moon Express to build and test its lunar lander.[3]

Notes

  1. McDowell, Jonathan (1998-02-22). "Issue 350". Jonathan's Space Report. Jonathan's Space Page. Archived from the original on 2010-05-03. Retrieved 2009-07-09.
  2. Table 3
  3. "Towers at disused Florida launch pad to be toppled Thursday". spaceflightnow.com. Spaceflight Now. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 2018-07-12.
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References

SLC-17 showing pads A and B in 2007
SLC-17 blockhouse
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