The Titan IV was developed to provide assured capability to launch
Space Shuttle–class payloads for the Air Force. The Titan IV could be launched with no
third stage, the
Inertial Upper Stage (IUS), or the
Centaur upper stage. The Titan IV was made up of two large
solid-fuel rocket boosters and a two-stage liquid-fueled core. The two storable liquid fuel core stages used
Aerozine 50 fuel and
nitrogen tetroxide oxidizer. These propellants are
hypergolic, igniting on contact, and are liquids at room temperature, so no tank insulation is needed. This allowed the launcher to be stored in a ready state for extended periods, but both propellants are extremely toxic. The Titan IV could be launched from either coast:
SLC-40 or
41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station near Cocoa Beach, Florida and at
SLC-4E, at
Vandenberg Air Force Base launch sites 55 miles northwest of
Santa Barbara California. Launches to
polar orbits occurred from Vandenberg, with most other launches taking place at Cape Canaveral.
Titan IV-A Titan IV-A flew with steel-cased solid
UA1207 rocket motors (SRMs) produced by Chemical Systems Division.
Titan IV-B The Titan IV-B evolved from the Titan III family and was similar to the Titan 34D. While the launcher family had an extremely good reliability record in its first two decades, this changed in the 1980s with the loss of a Titan 34D in 1985 followed by the disastrous explosion of another in 1986 due to a
SRM failure. Due to this, the Titan IV-B vehicle was intended to use the new composite-casing Upgraded Solid Rocket Motors. Due to development problems the first few Titan IV-B launches flew with the old-style UA1207 SRMs. First TITAN IV launch from Complex 41 - 14 June 1989.jpg|Titan IV-A Titan-4(01)A Centaur - ELINT-Payload.jpg|Titan-4(01)A Centaur Titan IVB Centaur launching ELINTspy satellite.jpg|Titan IV-B Centaur LR91-AJ-11 rocket engine - Thrust chamber.jpg|
LR91-AJ-11 rocket engine thrust chamber and injector Bottom of First Stage of Titan IVB Rocket - LR87 rocket engine nozzles.jpg|Bottom of first stage of Titan IV-B rocket
General characteristics • Builder: Lockheed-Martin Astronautics • Power Plant: • Stage 0 consisted of two solid-rocket motors. • Stage 1 used an
LR87-AJ-11 liquid-propellant rocket engine. • Stage 2 used the
LR91-AJ-11 liquid-propellant engine. • Optional upper stages included the
Centaur and
Inertial Upper Stage. • Guidance System: A
ring laser gyro guidance system manufactured by
Honeywell. • Thrust: • Stage 0: Solid rocket motors provided 1.7 million pounds force (7.56 MN) per motor at liftoff. • Stage 1: LR87-AJ-11 provided an average of 548,000 pounds force (2.44 MN) • Stage 2: LR91-AJ-11 provided an average of 105,000 pounds force (467 kN). • Optional Centaur (
RL10A-3-3A) upper stage provided 33,100 pounds force (147 kN) and the Inertial Upper Stage provided up to 41,500 pounds force (185 kN). • Length: Up to • Lift Capability: • Could carry up to into low Earth orbit • up to into a
geosynchronous orbit when launched from Cape Canaveral AFS, Fla.; • and up to into a
low Earth polar orbit when launched from Vandenberg AFB. • into geosynchronous orbit: • with Centaur upper stage • with Inertial Upper Stage •
Payload fairing: • Manufacturer: McDonnell Douglas Space Systems Co • Diameter: • Length: 56, 66, 76, or 86 ft • Mass: 11,000, 12,000, 13,000, or 14,000 lb • Design: 3 sections, isogrid structure, Aluminum • Maximum Takeoff Weight: Approximately 2.2 million pounds (1,000,000 kg) • Cost: Approximately $250–350 million, depending on launch configuration. • Date deployed: June 1989 • Launch sites: Cape Canaveral AFS, Fla., and Vandenberg AFB, Calif.
Upgrades Solid Rocket Motor Upgrade test stand In 1988–89, The
Ralph M. Parsons Company designed and built a full-scale steel tower and deflector facility, which was used to test the Titan IV
Solid Rocket Motor Upgrade (SRMU). The launch and the effect of the SRMU thrust force on the Titan IV vehicle were modeled. To evaluate the magnitude of the thrust force, the SRMU was connected to the steel tower through load measurement systems and launched in-place. It was the first full-scale test conducted to simulate the effects of the SRMU on the Titan IV vehicle.
Proposed aluminum-lithium tanks In the early 1980s,
General Dynamics developed a plan to assemble a lunar landing spacecraft in-orbit under the name
Early Lunar Access. A Space Shuttle would lift a lunar lander into orbit and then a Titan IV rocket would launch with a modified
Centaur G-Prime stage to rendezvous and dock. The plan required upgrading the Space Shuttle and Titan IV to use lighter
aluminium-lithium alloy propellant tanks. The plan never came to fruition, but in the 1990s the Shuttle's
External Tank was converted to aluminum-lithium tanks to rendezvous with the highly inclined orbit of the Russian
Mir Space Station. == Type identification ==