Space Robot Maker MDA Nets Hubble Repair Contract 36
hyperlinx writes "MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates Ltd. said on Wednesday it has signed a $154 million deal to help NASA's controversial repair mission to fix the aging Hubble Space Telescope. The Canadian firm that built the Canadarm robotic arm technology used on NASA's space shuttles won the contract 'to provide a potential information and robotic servicing solution' in a rescue project being eyed for 2007."
Size (Score:2)
Re:Size (Score:1)
Re:Size (Score:2)
Define "repair"? (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't mean to be negative (if they can, great!), but it is not exactly an easy job to unscrew bolts and fastners by hand, even on ground!
I forgot what is built in as a modular unit without many mechanical parts to support. Solar panel and batteries may be replaceable with care. But can someone tell me if a gryoscope can be replaced without using Philip screwdriver? I know that some science instruments are fastened with bolts. I'm not holding m
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Define "repair"? (Score:1)
Replace batterys, gyros, a few computer modules, Wide Field Camera, COSTAR and a few other things. It's a huge mission.
Pretty much all the operations have been demonstrated with a robot on the ground by MDA which is why they were awarded the contract, so yeah, its possible.
Why not a manned mission? (Score:3, Insightful)
Too dangerous (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Too dangerous (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
There is another issue. We only have three shuttles left. It maybe they fear lossing the machine more than the men. They of course would never say that. Frankly I think we need to build a new shuttle. Set the target at the same performance as the current shuttle, the same payload. But use modern t
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
And possibly only enough parts for two. In one of the post Columbia reports I recall reading that they rotate some of the parts through because they don't have enough-- i.e. when one shuttle lands, they pull some parts and move them up to the next one that will launch.
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
I think that last sentence says it rather succinctly. And as far as fixing it with a robot, or remote teleoperators, and I like the latter much better than pure robotics, when it comes to getting it done expediciously because the man can adjust the angle of the screwdriver by feel much better tha
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
when it comes to getting it done expediciously because the man can adjust the angle of the screwdriver by feel much better than the robotic stuff can, or can back up and get a slightly better grip on the nut when he feels the nut starting to round, I can't see any way but a manned mission.
There is a tradeoff for telepresence but it may not be what you think. A spacesuited astronaut has a LOT less dexterity and tactile feedback than you think. That's why they have to spend so much time and money training
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
Fully agreed that the delay would take some getting used to. Four hours of it would be exhausting, but unlike in space, when you get to a breaking point, you can bring in the next shift and go home.
It helps that Hubble was designed to be serviced in space with the minimal dexterity and tactile feedback. Most of the repairs considt of switching out fair sized modules rather than (impossible) fine manipulation.
I imagine after a while, the brain would naturally compensate for the delayed response and proba
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
That said, if they do this thing by telepesence, I hope they broadcast it, I'd love to watch & see how guys that have trained for that for months actually do it.
Question is, if they don't ta
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
Question is, if they don't take a shuttle up to take the robotics to it, what are they going to use? I'd assume the robotics would be expensive enough they wouldn't really want them to be dumped into the pacific, what doesn't burn up that is. OTOH, they'll do what they have to do. If that means its throwaway, well...
They might have to burn it up. Oddly, that might even make economic sense. It probably would be cheaper than the once planned shuttle flight would have been.
At the same time, if they did g
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
I doubt if the robotics and the upper stage, which will probably outweigh the hubble, could get enough delta-vee out of ion thrust to make the ISS
I'm not sure the Hubble 'rescue vehicle' would necessarily be that heavy compared to Hubble itself (which is large as satellites go) once it has expended it's xenon by boosting Hubble. If so, once dettached, it's effective acceleration would be more than doubled when flying to ISS.
Of course, it could still make good sense to leave the whole thing attached to
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
OTOH, the giro's, steering reaction masses and such are sized to handle the weight of the hubble. I'd think adding an offcenter weight to that would make them have to rewrite all their aiming software to compensate, and wou
Re:Too dangerous (Score:2)
Re:Why not a manned mission? (Score:1)
Simple - the robotic system is much cheaper and much safer.
While the robotic system is only $150Mil, the entire mission cost will be over $1 Billion. However the intended repair mission is huge. If you send a shuttle up to do the repair as many suggest, there is so much to do that a manned mission would take longer than the shutle can stay in orbit.
Which kind of space robots do they make? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Which kind of space robots do they make? (Score:2, Funny)
local article (Score:3, Informative)
Good if only $150 million.. (Score:2)
Re:Good if only $150 million.. (Score:2)
Re:Good if only $150 million.. (Score:2)
Modern space-telescope mirrors weigh much less than the Hubble's, the Hubble's orbit is less than satisfactory, and so on. It has bee
Sounds like a plan, master rocket scientist (Score:2)
The robotic mission will replace the old batteries and broken gyroscopes and provide a way to deorbit the telescope after it becomes unable to deorbit itself. It seems to me t
Re:Sounds like a plan, master rocket scientist (Score:2)
For the very finest guiding and control HST uses a signal off the telescope rather than just star trackers and gyros/IRUs. There may not be a reasonable way to bolt a robot on the outside and couple it to that system.
For 154 million, I'll go fix it (Score:1)
Heck, a lot of people would do it for free, just for the ride!
People PAY to participate in sports more dangerous than a current shuttle mission!
When orbital space missions become as safe as a commercial flight, there will be the dangerous interplanetary missions. Being on the edge is dangerous, but someone has to do it, and some people love to
Re:For 154 million, I'll go fix it (Score:2)
For $154 million, they'd let you touch the orbiter on the launch pad while it's fueled.
Re:For 154 million, I'll go fix it (Score:3, Informative)
It may hire some people to ride the thing, but, it wont come near filling it up with fuel and getting it out to the pad, never mind an actual launch. Prior to all the new safety rules, that cost 500 million a trip. All the new rules probably pushing that up to nearly a billion dollars per flight now.
MDA did not build the Canadarm (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, MacDonald Dettwiler did buy Spar Aerospace, who built the "Canadarm", but the company otherwise has little to do with it. They are, however, involved in some of the robotics of the ISS (called "Canadarm 2"). [mdrobotics.ca]
BTW -- few people other than Canadians (of which I am one) call it the "Canadarm".
Tony in Vancouver
Re:MDA did not build the Canadarm (Score:1)
What the heck are you talking about??
MacDonald Dettwiler (now MDA) is the parent company of the division called MDRobotics that built the Canadarm, Canadarm2, SPDM, and practically every other space robot arm out there.
Just because the parent office of a multidivisional company was not involved doesn't mean you can say that MDA did not build the Canadarm. The fact that it was called Spar at the time the Canadarm was built is irrelevant.