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Cape_Canaveral_Air_Force_Station_Launch_Complex_6 Latitude and Longitude:

28°26′27″N 80°34′22″W / 28.44083°N 80.57278°W / 28.44083; -80.57278
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Launch Complex 6
Launch site Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
Location 28°26′27″N 80°34′22″W / 28.44083°N 80.57278°W / 28.44083; -80.57278
Short nameLC-6
Operator US Army ( ABMA)
Total launches43
Launch pad(s)1
Launch history
StatusInactive
First launchRedstone 7
20 April 1955
Last launchRedstone Training #23
27 June 1961
Associated
rockets
PGM-11 Redstone
PGM-19 Jupiter
Jupiter-A
Jupiter-C

Launch Complex 6 (LC-6) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida is a launch site used by Redstone and Jupiter series rockets and missiles. It is on the south end of Cape Canaveral, close to Launch Complex 5, with which it shared a blockhouse. With LC-5, it was the location of the first tests of the mobile launch concept designed by Kurt H. Debus.[ citation needed] This concept was revised and improved and eventually used at LC-39 for the Saturn V and Space Shuttle.

LC-6 was deactivated in 1961. The blockhouse and a 61.96 m (203.3 ft) square concrete pad are the only parts of the complex that remain intact, although the mobile service tower was under restoration as of 2011. The complex is part of the "Cape Canaveral: Then and Now" tour, available from the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.

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