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Encyclopedia > Titan I missile
Titan I
Launch of a Titan I ICBM from
Launch of a Titan I ICBM from Cape Canaveral
Stages 2
1 - 1st Stage Engines LR87-AJ-3
Thrust 1,334 kN
Burn time 140 seconds
Fuels RP-1/LOX
2 - 2nd Stage Engine LR91-AJ-3
Thrust 356 kN
Burn time 155 seconds
Fuels RP-1/LOX
ICBM 1st Launch February 1959
Payload LEO 3,000 lb (1,816 kg)

The Titan I was the United States' first true multistage ICBM. It was the first in a series of Titan rockets, but was unique among them in that it used LOX and RP-1 as its fuels, while the later versions all used storable fuels instead.

Enlarge
Titan 1 complex at Beale AFB, April 1962. The B-52 flyby was staged for the 1963 movie A Gathering of Eagles.

The program began in January 1955 and took shape in parallel with the Atlas (SM-65/HGM-25) intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). The Air Force's goal in launching the Titan program was twofold: one, to serve as a backup should Atlas fail; and two, to develop a large, two-stage missile with a longer range and bigger payload that also could serve as a booster for space flights.


Produced by the Glenn L. Martin Company (which became "The Martin Company" in 1957), Titan I was a two-stage, liquid-fueled missile. The first stage delivered 300,000 pounds force (1,334 kN) of thrust, the second stage 80,000 pounds force (356 kN). The fact that Titan I, like Atlas, burned RP-1 and LOX was a severe drawback.


The missile utilized both radio and all-inertial guidance. Deployed in a "hard" underground silo, it had to be raised to surface by a special launcher for firing. The Titan I had an effective range of 5,500 nautical miles (10,200 km). As each stage was fired, its engines and fuel tanks dropped away, thereby decreasing the mass of the vehicle. That made for a more efficient missile, which resulted in increased range and enabled a larger payload.


When the storable fueled Titan II and the solid fueled Minuteman I were deployed in 1963, the Titan I and Atlas missiles became obsolete. They were retired from service as ICBMs in early 1965. The Titan II remained in service until the 1980s however, as it carried a much larger payload that could be used as an effective "city buster".


Titan 1 Specifications

  • Liftoff thrust: 1,296 kN Total mass: 105,142 kg
  • Core diameter: 3.1 m. Total length: 31.0 m
  • Development Cost: $ 1,643,300,000.00 in 1960 Dollars.
  • Flyaway cost: $ 1,500,000.00 each, in 1962 Dollars.
  • Total development missiles built: 47. Total missiles fired: 68.
  • Total production missiles built: 108. Total deployed missiles: 54.
Enlarge
Titan 1 ICBM Underground Silo Complex
  • Titan 1 First Stage:
  • Gross mass: 76,203 kg
  • Empty mass: 4,000 kg
  • Thrust (vac): 1,467 kN
  • Isp (vac): 290 lbf.s/lb (2.84 kNs/kg)
  • Isp (sea level): 256 lbf.s/lb (2.51 kNs/kg)
  • Burn time: 138 s
  • Diameter: 3.1 m
  • Span: 3.1 m
  • Length: 16.0 m
  • Propellants: Liquid Oxygen (Lox) / Kerosene.
  • Number of engines: Two - LR-87-3.
  • Titan 1 Second Stage:
  • Gross mass: 28,939 kg
  • Empty mass: 1,725 kg
  • Thrust (vac):356 kN
  • Isp (vac): 308 lbf.s/lb (3.02 kNs/kg)
  • Isp (sea level): 210 lbf.s/lb (2.06 kNs/kg)
  • Burn time: 225 s
  • Diameter: 2.3 m
  • Span: 2.3 m
  • Length: 9.8 m
  • Propellants: Liquid Oxygen (Lox) / Kerosene.
  • Number of engines: One - LR-91-3.

External Link

  • Titan 1 ICBM History site (http://www.geocities.com/titan_1_missile/)
  • Titan 1A base environmental studies, USACE- Lincoln, CA (http://www.titani-a.org/)
    • Info on "Northern California Triad" of Titan missile bases in Lincoln, CA; Chico, CA and Live Oak, CA (Sutter Buttes)


See also: List of missiles


  Results from FactBites:
 
Titan (rocket family) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (748 words)
Titan was a family of U.S. expendable rockets used between 1959 and 2005.
The Titan II was a hypergolicly-fueled two-stage ICBM that was used by the U.S. Air Force from the mid 1960s to the mid 1980s.
The current owners of the Titan line (Lockheed-Martin) decided to extend their Atlas family of rockets instead of the more expensive Titans, along with joint ventures to sell launches on the Proton and the new Delta IV class of medium and heavy-lift launch vehicles.
Titan missile - definition of Titan missile in Encyclopedia (683 words)
Titan is a family of U.S. expendable rockets.
The Titan IV is a stretched Titan III with non-optional solid rocket boosters.
The current owners of the Titan line (Lockheed-Martin) have decided to extend their Atlas family of rockets instead of the Titans.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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