A
modified version of the missile (8K71PS) launched the world's first satellite into orbit when
Sputnik 1 lifted off from Baikonur on 4 October 1957.
Sputnik 2 followed on 3 November 1957. Sputnik (8A91) subsequently launched
Sputnik 3 on 15 May 1958. The first strategic-missile unit went on alert status on 15 December 1959 at
Plesetsk in the north-west of the USSR. An improved version, the
R-7A with a lighter warhead, all inertial guidance system and a range of 12,000 km, became the standard version once it reached operational status on 12 September 1960. The costs of the system were high, mostly due to the difficulty of constructing in remote areas the large launch sites required. Besides the cost, the missile system faced other operational challenges. With the
U-2 overflights, the huge R-7 launch complexes could not be hidden and therefore could be expected to be destroyed quickly in any nuclear war. Also, the R-7 took almost twenty hours to prepare for launching, and it could not be left on alert for more than a day due to its
cryogenic fuel system. Therefore, the Soviet force could not be kept on permanent alert and could have been subject to an air strike before launching. These issues meant that the original planned fifty launch complexes were reduced to six, five for strategic forces, Site 31 at Baikonur and Sites 16, 41 and 43 (2 pads) at
Plesetsk and one for space launches at
Site 1,
Baikonur. The limitations of the R-7 pushed the Soviet Union into rapidly developing second-generation missiles which would be more viable weapons systems, particularly the
R-16. The R-7 was phased out of military service by mid-1968. While the R-7 turned out to be impractical as a weapon, it became the basis for a series of highly successful Soviet
expendable space launch vehicles, including
Vostok family of launchers,
Molniya and
Soyuz family of launchers. ==Variants==