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Boeing’s Delta IV Launches NRO Satellite from West Coach

 

Boeing completed the first flight of a Delta IV rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., on June 27 with the successful launch of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) satellite, NROL-22. The launch is the first West Coast mission completed for the U.S. Air Force Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program. (Boeing photo)

ST. LOUIS, June 29, 2006/Satnews Daily/ ― Boeing (NYSE:BA) completed the first flight of a Delta IV rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. on Tuesday evening with the successful launch of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) satellite, NROL-22. The launch is the first West Coast mission completed for the U.S. Air Force Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program.

 

Liftoff of the Delta IV Medium+ (4, 2) configuration vehicle occurred at 8:33 p.m. PDT from Space Launch Complex (SLC) 6. The payload was successfully deployed approximately 54 minutes later.

 

“This first Delta IV launch from Vandenberg is an important achievement for Boeing and our NRO and Air Force customers,” said Dan Collins, vice president of Boeing Launch Systems. “We successfully validated launching the Delta IV from SLC-6, providing the Air Force and the nation with the first operational West Coast launch site for the EELV program.”

 

He said with this launch, the Delta team has fulfilled all the EELV requirements outlined by the Air Force. “We have a full family of launch vehicles, including a flight-proven, heavy- lift vehicle, a domestically produced first stage engine and now fully operational launch sites on both coasts,” Collins explained.

 

SLC-6 is the West Coast launch site for the Boeing Delta IV family of launch vehicles that provides the Air Force the strategic capability to launch national security satellites to polar, Sun-synchronous and high inclination orbits. The new launch site can support all five configurations of the Delta IV family.

 

The Wednesday mission is the first for the NRO aboard a Delta IV and the second aboard a Delta rocket. The first was the GeoLITE mission in 2001 aboard a Delta II.

 

The 132-acre SLC-6 features structures similar to Boeing's Delta IV SLC-37 launch site at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., with a Fixed Umbilical Tower, Mobile Service Tower, Fixed Pad Erector, Launch Control Center and Operations Building, and a Horizontal Integration Facility. SLC-6 also features a Mobile Assembly Shelter that protects the rocket from adverse weather.

 

Launch vehicle hardware is transported from the Boeing factory in Decatur, Ala., to Vandenberg via the Delta Mariner ship that docks just south of SLC-6.

 

Boeing said the next Delta IV launch from Vandenberg is planned for late 2006 aboard a Delta IV Medium vehicle that will fly a mission for the Air Force Defense Meteorological Satellite Program, DMSP-17.

 

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