Which has been the most gregarious rocket, launched from the most sites?











up vote
22
down vote

favorite












Which orbital launch vehicle has been "getting around" the most? Which rocket has put things in orbit from the largest number of different launch sites?



For the purposes of this question, allow for some flexibility; adding an extra side booster doesn't necessarily make it a different rocket. Two launch adjacent launch pads don't count as different sites, but Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and KSC would be different.



Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, but use of different ports, or substantially different areas at sea would.










share|improve this question




















  • 2




    I like this question and it definitely has a canonical answer as of this point in spacetime. However, I’m concerned that the answer to this question is likely to change over time. Perhaps there is a way to modify this question so that the answer withstands the test of time...
    – Paul
    Nov 7 at 1:18








  • 1




    @Roger I would certainly consider that a good answer. I've mentioned that interpretation should be flexible, and launch from an airplane is something I didn't expect but it certainly fits. Launch from the Moon is at least from the surface of a body, much more of a launch site than an airplane's underbelly. I'd say just go for it in this case.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 15:26






  • 1




    @Puffin I'm using something like $d_{tot}=d_{t}+d_{ap}$ where $d$ stands for distance measured in "difficulty" units. There is both transportation difficulty or $d_t$ which measures how hard and far it would be to change your mind and move a rocket from one site to the other, and administrative and programatic difficulty which is sort-of self explanatory and redundant. Looking at ...difference between Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center? it sounds like it wouldn't be so easy to change your mind at the last minute and move between sites.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 1:32








  • 1




    @Puffin How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30








  • 3




    @RedSonja I'd thought about working "strap-on" in there somehow, in place of "adding an extra side booster" but then I thought it just got weird.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 12:08

















up vote
22
down vote

favorite












Which orbital launch vehicle has been "getting around" the most? Which rocket has put things in orbit from the largest number of different launch sites?



For the purposes of this question, allow for some flexibility; adding an extra side booster doesn't necessarily make it a different rocket. Two launch adjacent launch pads don't count as different sites, but Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and KSC would be different.



Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, but use of different ports, or substantially different areas at sea would.










share|improve this question




















  • 2




    I like this question and it definitely has a canonical answer as of this point in spacetime. However, I’m concerned that the answer to this question is likely to change over time. Perhaps there is a way to modify this question so that the answer withstands the test of time...
    – Paul
    Nov 7 at 1:18








  • 1




    @Roger I would certainly consider that a good answer. I've mentioned that interpretation should be flexible, and launch from an airplane is something I didn't expect but it certainly fits. Launch from the Moon is at least from the surface of a body, much more of a launch site than an airplane's underbelly. I'd say just go for it in this case.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 15:26






  • 1




    @Puffin I'm using something like $d_{tot}=d_{t}+d_{ap}$ where $d$ stands for distance measured in "difficulty" units. There is both transportation difficulty or $d_t$ which measures how hard and far it would be to change your mind and move a rocket from one site to the other, and administrative and programatic difficulty which is sort-of self explanatory and redundant. Looking at ...difference between Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center? it sounds like it wouldn't be so easy to change your mind at the last minute and move between sites.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 1:32








  • 1




    @Puffin How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30








  • 3




    @RedSonja I'd thought about working "strap-on" in there somehow, in place of "adding an extra side booster" but then I thought it just got weird.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 12:08















up vote
22
down vote

favorite









up vote
22
down vote

favorite











Which orbital launch vehicle has been "getting around" the most? Which rocket has put things in orbit from the largest number of different launch sites?



For the purposes of this question, allow for some flexibility; adding an extra side booster doesn't necessarily make it a different rocket. Two launch adjacent launch pads don't count as different sites, but Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and KSC would be different.



Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, but use of different ports, or substantially different areas at sea would.










share|improve this question















Which orbital launch vehicle has been "getting around" the most? Which rocket has put things in orbit from the largest number of different launch sites?



For the purposes of this question, allow for some flexibility; adding an extra side booster doesn't necessarily make it a different rocket. Two launch adjacent launch pads don't count as different sites, but Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and KSC would be different.



Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, but use of different ports, or substantially different areas at sea would.







launch launch-site






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 7 at 4:37

























asked Nov 7 at 0:54









uhoh

32.3k16112398




32.3k16112398








  • 2




    I like this question and it definitely has a canonical answer as of this point in spacetime. However, I’m concerned that the answer to this question is likely to change over time. Perhaps there is a way to modify this question so that the answer withstands the test of time...
    – Paul
    Nov 7 at 1:18








  • 1




    @Roger I would certainly consider that a good answer. I've mentioned that interpretation should be flexible, and launch from an airplane is something I didn't expect but it certainly fits. Launch from the Moon is at least from the surface of a body, much more of a launch site than an airplane's underbelly. I'd say just go for it in this case.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 15:26






  • 1




    @Puffin I'm using something like $d_{tot}=d_{t}+d_{ap}$ where $d$ stands for distance measured in "difficulty" units. There is both transportation difficulty or $d_t$ which measures how hard and far it would be to change your mind and move a rocket from one site to the other, and administrative and programatic difficulty which is sort-of self explanatory and redundant. Looking at ...difference between Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center? it sounds like it wouldn't be so easy to change your mind at the last minute and move between sites.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 1:32








  • 1




    @Puffin How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30








  • 3




    @RedSonja I'd thought about working "strap-on" in there somehow, in place of "adding an extra side booster" but then I thought it just got weird.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 12:08
















  • 2




    I like this question and it definitely has a canonical answer as of this point in spacetime. However, I’m concerned that the answer to this question is likely to change over time. Perhaps there is a way to modify this question so that the answer withstands the test of time...
    – Paul
    Nov 7 at 1:18








  • 1




    @Roger I would certainly consider that a good answer. I've mentioned that interpretation should be flexible, and launch from an airplane is something I didn't expect but it certainly fits. Launch from the Moon is at least from the surface of a body, much more of a launch site than an airplane's underbelly. I'd say just go for it in this case.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 15:26






  • 1




    @Puffin I'm using something like $d_{tot}=d_{t}+d_{ap}$ where $d$ stands for distance measured in "difficulty" units. There is both transportation difficulty or $d_t$ which measures how hard and far it would be to change your mind and move a rocket from one site to the other, and administrative and programatic difficulty which is sort-of self explanatory and redundant. Looking at ...difference between Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center? it sounds like it wouldn't be so easy to change your mind at the last minute and move between sites.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 1:32








  • 1




    @Puffin How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30








  • 3




    @RedSonja I'd thought about working "strap-on" in there somehow, in place of "adding an extra side booster" but then I thought it just got weird.
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 12:08










2




2




I like this question and it definitely has a canonical answer as of this point in spacetime. However, I’m concerned that the answer to this question is likely to change over time. Perhaps there is a way to modify this question so that the answer withstands the test of time...
– Paul
Nov 7 at 1:18






I like this question and it definitely has a canonical answer as of this point in spacetime. However, I’m concerned that the answer to this question is likely to change over time. Perhaps there is a way to modify this question so that the answer withstands the test of time...
– Paul
Nov 7 at 1:18






1




1




@Roger I would certainly consider that a good answer. I've mentioned that interpretation should be flexible, and launch from an airplane is something I didn't expect but it certainly fits. Launch from the Moon is at least from the surface of a body, much more of a launch site than an airplane's underbelly. I'd say just go for it in this case.
– uhoh
Nov 7 at 15:26




@Roger I would certainly consider that a good answer. I've mentioned that interpretation should be flexible, and launch from an airplane is something I didn't expect but it certainly fits. Launch from the Moon is at least from the surface of a body, much more of a launch site than an airplane's underbelly. I'd say just go for it in this case.
– uhoh
Nov 7 at 15:26




1




1




@Puffin I'm using something like $d_{tot}=d_{t}+d_{ap}$ where $d$ stands for distance measured in "difficulty" units. There is both transportation difficulty or $d_t$ which measures how hard and far it would be to change your mind and move a rocket from one site to the other, and administrative and programatic difficulty which is sort-of self explanatory and redundant. Looking at ...difference between Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center? it sounds like it wouldn't be so easy to change your mind at the last minute and move between sites.
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 1:32






@Puffin I'm using something like $d_{tot}=d_{t}+d_{ap}$ where $d$ stands for distance measured in "difficulty" units. There is both transportation difficulty or $d_t$ which measures how hard and far it would be to change your mind and move a rocket from one site to the other, and administrative and programatic difficulty which is sort-of self explanatory and redundant. Looking at ...difference between Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center? it sounds like it wouldn't be so easy to change your mind at the last minute and move between sites.
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 1:32






1




1




@Puffin How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 3:30






@Puffin How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 3:30






3




3




@RedSonja I'd thought about working "strap-on" in there somehow, in place of "adding an extra side booster" but then I thought it just got weird.
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 12:08






@RedSonja I'd thought about working "strap-on" in there somehow, in place of "adding an extra side booster" but then I thought it just got weird.
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 12:08












4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
58
down vote













The Apollo Lunar Module has launched from six lunar sites:



Apollo 11 — Mare Tranquillitatis



Apollo 12 — Oceanus Procellarum



Apollo 14 — Fra Mauro



Apollo 15 — Hadley/Apennines



Apollo 16 — Descartes



Apollo 17 — Taurus-Littrow






share|improve this answer

















  • 8




    Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 16:04








  • 15




    Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
    – Roger
    Nov 7 at 16:05






  • 2




    Super answer! +1
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 7 at 16:12






  • 9




    Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
    – Russell Borogove
    Nov 7 at 16:30






  • 2




    Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
    – Dr Sheldon
    Nov 7 at 16:33


















up vote
33
down vote













Pegasus, whose carrier plane has lifted off from




  1. Edwards AFB

  2. Cape Canaveral

  3. Wallops Flight Facility

  4. Base Aerea de Gando, Gran Canaria, Spain

  5. Vandenberg AFB

  6. Kwajalein Atoll


on successful space launch missions.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

















  • 5




    Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 4:23






  • 1




    @RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 10 at 13:56


















up vote
31
down vote













The Soyuz booster have been launched from:




  • Baikonur

  • Plesetsk

  • Kourou

  • Vostochny


Making it the only rocket to have been launched from 3 (4 if you count USSR) different countries and 3 different continents !



Contenders would be: the Falcon 9, launched from




  • Kennedy Space Center

  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Cape Canaveral


Tied with Minotaur IV and Athena 1




  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Kodiak

  • Cape Canaveral






share|improve this answer























  • you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 7:18






  • 6




    @Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 8:33






  • 1




    Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
    – Puffin
    Nov 7 at 15:44












  • @Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:12








  • 1




    For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30




















up vote
12
down vote













Scout:




  • KSC

  • Vandenberg

  • Wallops


  • San Marco platform (owned by Italy, off the coast of Kenya)






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    yes, that's the one
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 14:48










  • not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:15






  • 8




    Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
    – Coomie
    Nov 8 at 1:32











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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
58
down vote













The Apollo Lunar Module has launched from six lunar sites:



Apollo 11 — Mare Tranquillitatis



Apollo 12 — Oceanus Procellarum



Apollo 14 — Fra Mauro



Apollo 15 — Hadley/Apennines



Apollo 16 — Descartes



Apollo 17 — Taurus-Littrow






share|improve this answer

















  • 8




    Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 16:04








  • 15




    Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
    – Roger
    Nov 7 at 16:05






  • 2




    Super answer! +1
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 7 at 16:12






  • 9




    Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
    – Russell Borogove
    Nov 7 at 16:30






  • 2




    Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
    – Dr Sheldon
    Nov 7 at 16:33















up vote
58
down vote













The Apollo Lunar Module has launched from six lunar sites:



Apollo 11 — Mare Tranquillitatis



Apollo 12 — Oceanus Procellarum



Apollo 14 — Fra Mauro



Apollo 15 — Hadley/Apennines



Apollo 16 — Descartes



Apollo 17 — Taurus-Littrow






share|improve this answer

















  • 8




    Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 16:04








  • 15




    Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
    – Roger
    Nov 7 at 16:05






  • 2




    Super answer! +1
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 7 at 16:12






  • 9




    Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
    – Russell Borogove
    Nov 7 at 16:30






  • 2




    Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
    – Dr Sheldon
    Nov 7 at 16:33













up vote
58
down vote










up vote
58
down vote









The Apollo Lunar Module has launched from six lunar sites:



Apollo 11 — Mare Tranquillitatis



Apollo 12 — Oceanus Procellarum



Apollo 14 — Fra Mauro



Apollo 15 — Hadley/Apennines



Apollo 16 — Descartes



Apollo 17 — Taurus-Littrow






share|improve this answer












The Apollo Lunar Module has launched from six lunar sites:



Apollo 11 — Mare Tranquillitatis



Apollo 12 — Oceanus Procellarum



Apollo 14 — Fra Mauro



Apollo 15 — Hadley/Apennines



Apollo 16 — Descartes



Apollo 17 — Taurus-Littrow







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 7 at 15:59









Roger

82919




82919








  • 8




    Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 16:04








  • 15




    Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
    – Roger
    Nov 7 at 16:05






  • 2




    Super answer! +1
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 7 at 16:12






  • 9




    Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
    – Russell Borogove
    Nov 7 at 16:30






  • 2




    Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
    – Dr Sheldon
    Nov 7 at 16:33














  • 8




    Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 16:04








  • 15




    Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
    – Roger
    Nov 7 at 16:05






  • 2




    Super answer! +1
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 7 at 16:12






  • 9




    Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
    – Russell Borogove
    Nov 7 at 16:30






  • 2




    Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
    – Dr Sheldon
    Nov 7 at 16:33








8




8




Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
– uhoh
Nov 7 at 16:04






Great! Launch sides on good-old Terra firma oh, that's Luna firma in this case. At least none of this air or water launching; these are real, solid launch sites, equipped with real launch platforms
– uhoh
Nov 7 at 16:04






15




15




Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
– Roger
Nov 7 at 16:05




Launching from a Mare scores half a point for water launch.
– Roger
Nov 7 at 16:05




2




2




Super answer! +1
– Organic Marble
Nov 7 at 16:12




Super answer! +1
– Organic Marble
Nov 7 at 16:12




9




9




Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
– Russell Borogove
Nov 7 at 16:30




Technically correct -- the best kind of correct! (Usually when I make this comment I don't mean it as a compliment, but this is the exception.)
– Russell Borogove
Nov 7 at 16:30




2




2




Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
– Dr Sheldon
Nov 7 at 16:33




Plus one "air" launch (Apollo 10).
– Dr Sheldon
Nov 7 at 16:33










up vote
33
down vote













Pegasus, whose carrier plane has lifted off from




  1. Edwards AFB

  2. Cape Canaveral

  3. Wallops Flight Facility

  4. Base Aerea de Gando, Gran Canaria, Spain

  5. Vandenberg AFB

  6. Kwajalein Atoll


on successful space launch missions.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

















  • 5




    Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 4:23






  • 1




    @RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 10 at 13:56















up vote
33
down vote













Pegasus, whose carrier plane has lifted off from




  1. Edwards AFB

  2. Cape Canaveral

  3. Wallops Flight Facility

  4. Base Aerea de Gando, Gran Canaria, Spain

  5. Vandenberg AFB

  6. Kwajalein Atoll


on successful space launch missions.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

















  • 5




    Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 4:23






  • 1




    @RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 10 at 13:56













up vote
33
down vote










up vote
33
down vote









Pegasus, whose carrier plane has lifted off from




  1. Edwards AFB

  2. Cape Canaveral

  3. Wallops Flight Facility

  4. Base Aerea de Gando, Gran Canaria, Spain

  5. Vandenberg AFB

  6. Kwajalein Atoll


on successful space launch missions.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer












Pegasus, whose carrier plane has lifted off from




  1. Edwards AFB

  2. Cape Canaveral

  3. Wallops Flight Facility

  4. Base Aerea de Gando, Gran Canaria, Spain

  5. Vandenberg AFB

  6. Kwajalein Atoll


on successful space launch missions.



enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 7 at 4:16









Organic Marble

51.5k3135219




51.5k3135219








  • 5




    Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 4:23






  • 1




    @RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 10 at 13:56














  • 5




    Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
    – uhoh
    Nov 7 at 4:23






  • 1




    @RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
    – Organic Marble
    Nov 10 at 13:56








5




5




Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
– uhoh
Nov 7 at 4:23




Aha! I totally forgot about air-launches, but indeed this jet-setting rocket certainly "gets around" quite a bit.
– uhoh
Nov 7 at 4:23




1




1




@RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
– Organic Marble
Nov 10 at 13:56




@RonJohn I think they kinda ground ruled this out: "Launches from mobile launch platforms (on the ocean or land) shouldn't necessarily be counted as different just because each launch coordinate is slightly different, " (although air launch isn't specifically listed, I thought this applied)
– Organic Marble
Nov 10 at 13:56










up vote
31
down vote













The Soyuz booster have been launched from:




  • Baikonur

  • Plesetsk

  • Kourou

  • Vostochny


Making it the only rocket to have been launched from 3 (4 if you count USSR) different countries and 3 different continents !



Contenders would be: the Falcon 9, launched from




  • Kennedy Space Center

  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Cape Canaveral


Tied with Minotaur IV and Athena 1




  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Kodiak

  • Cape Canaveral






share|improve this answer























  • you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 7:18






  • 6




    @Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 8:33






  • 1




    Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
    – Puffin
    Nov 7 at 15:44












  • @Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:12








  • 1




    For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30

















up vote
31
down vote













The Soyuz booster have been launched from:




  • Baikonur

  • Plesetsk

  • Kourou

  • Vostochny


Making it the only rocket to have been launched from 3 (4 if you count USSR) different countries and 3 different continents !



Contenders would be: the Falcon 9, launched from




  • Kennedy Space Center

  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Cape Canaveral


Tied with Minotaur IV and Athena 1




  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Kodiak

  • Cape Canaveral






share|improve this answer























  • you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 7:18






  • 6




    @Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 8:33






  • 1




    Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
    – Puffin
    Nov 7 at 15:44












  • @Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:12








  • 1




    For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30















up vote
31
down vote










up vote
31
down vote









The Soyuz booster have been launched from:




  • Baikonur

  • Plesetsk

  • Kourou

  • Vostochny


Making it the only rocket to have been launched from 3 (4 if you count USSR) different countries and 3 different continents !



Contenders would be: the Falcon 9, launched from




  • Kennedy Space Center

  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Cape Canaveral


Tied with Minotaur IV and Athena 1




  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Kodiak

  • Cape Canaveral






share|improve this answer














The Soyuz booster have been launched from:




  • Baikonur

  • Plesetsk

  • Kourou

  • Vostochny


Making it the only rocket to have been launched from 3 (4 if you count USSR) different countries and 3 different continents !



Contenders would be: the Falcon 9, launched from




  • Kennedy Space Center

  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Cape Canaveral


Tied with Minotaur IV and Athena 1




  • Vandenberg Air Force Base

  • Kodiak

  • Cape Canaveral







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 8 at 4:56

























answered Nov 7 at 3:33









Antzi

7,57812250




7,57812250












  • you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 7:18






  • 6




    @Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 8:33






  • 1




    Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
    – Puffin
    Nov 7 at 15:44












  • @Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:12








  • 1




    For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30




















  • you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 7:18






  • 6




    @Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 8:33






  • 1




    Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
    – Puffin
    Nov 7 at 15:44












  • @Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:12








  • 1




    For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
    – uhoh
    Nov 8 at 3:30


















you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
– Hobbes
Nov 7 at 7:18




you count KSC and Cape Canaveral as 2 sites?
– Hobbes
Nov 7 at 7:18




6




6




@Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
– Antzi
Nov 7 at 8:33




@Hobbes I wouldn't, but OP specified they should be treated as different spaceports.
– Antzi
Nov 7 at 8:33




1




1




Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
– Puffin
Nov 7 at 15:44






Soyuz has been launched from Plesetsk as well. If you count the number of distinct pads its 8: 4 at Plesetsk, some decomissioned now, 2 at Baikonur and one at each of the other two. Complicated, because I think the Russian pads are at the same base but not "adjacent" in the terms of the OP question.
– Puffin
Nov 7 at 15:44














@Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
– Antzi
Nov 7 at 16:12






@Puffin I had totally forgotten about this ! Since they share the same name I think we can consider them as the same spaceport?
– Antzi
Nov 7 at 16:12






1




1




For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 3:30






For KSC versus Cape Canaveral see this comment. new question: How far is Cape Canaveral from Kennedy Space Center, administratively and programmatically?
– uhoh
Nov 8 at 3:30












up vote
12
down vote













Scout:




  • KSC

  • Vandenberg

  • Wallops


  • San Marco platform (owned by Italy, off the coast of Kenya)






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    yes, that's the one
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 14:48










  • not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:15






  • 8




    Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
    – Coomie
    Nov 8 at 1:32















up vote
12
down vote













Scout:




  • KSC

  • Vandenberg

  • Wallops


  • San Marco platform (owned by Italy, off the coast of Kenya)






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    yes, that's the one
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 14:48










  • not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:15






  • 8




    Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
    – Coomie
    Nov 8 at 1:32













up vote
12
down vote










up vote
12
down vote









Scout:




  • KSC

  • Vandenberg

  • Wallops


  • San Marco platform (owned by Italy, off the coast of Kenya)






share|improve this answer














Scout:




  • KSC

  • Vandenberg

  • Wallops


  • San Marco platform (owned by Italy, off the coast of Kenya)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 7 at 14:48

























answered Nov 7 at 14:42









Hobbes

81.6k2224366




81.6k2224366








  • 1




    yes, that's the one
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 14:48










  • not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:15






  • 8




    Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
    – Coomie
    Nov 8 at 1:32














  • 1




    yes, that's the one
    – Hobbes
    Nov 7 at 14:48










  • not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
    – Antzi
    Nov 7 at 16:15






  • 8




    Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
    – Coomie
    Nov 8 at 1:32








1




1




yes, that's the one
– Hobbes
Nov 7 at 14:48




yes, that's the one
– Hobbes
Nov 7 at 14:48












not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
– Antzi
Nov 7 at 16:15




not so fast ! It’s a tie with the Soyuz, see my edit thanks to Puffin :-)
– Antzi
Nov 7 at 16:15




8




8




Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
– Coomie
Nov 8 at 1:32




Kerbal Space Center is a fictional location... wait... oh. I've been playing that game too much, haven't I?
– Coomie
Nov 8 at 1:32


















 

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