CEV Revolutionary Gimballed Thrusters 71
simonbp writes "A Tennessee Tech Professor has proposed an innovative gimbal mount for 'inclusion to the design of [NASA's] CEV (Crew Exploration Vehicle), revolutionizing the vehicle's RCS (Reaction Control System) and solar panel orientation capabilities.' This will allow for nimble maneuvering and for the solar cells to maximize power production."
Re:What's the symbol? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's the symbol? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:What's the symbol? (Score:1)
Re:What's the symbol? (Score:2)
the russian wessels (Score:2)
Re:the russian wessels (Score:1)
Your analogy with the progress collision with Mir is, however, flawed - it had nothing to do with gimbals, as the capsule DOES NOT have gimballed RCS, the first stage of the rocket does.
to the original poster, I must note that the soyuz roket variant you pointed to used gimballed vernier thr
Re:the russian wessels (Score:2)
Indeed, as was the Rocketdyne J-2 on the Apollo command module. Both the Soyuz and Apollo thrusters are main engines. These gimballed thrusters are for the Reaction Control System, used for fine positioning and attitude control. RCS thrusters have traditionally been fixed, rather than steerable.
Re:the russian wessels (Score:1)
Gimbal? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Gimbal? (Score:5, Informative)
(funny, I was just reading that before coming to slashdot... even better is the semi-related water rocket [wikipedia.org] page.... awesome stuff)
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
I just started this page a few hours ago! Must be a new record for wiki-to-slashdot linking.
Re:Gimbal? (Score:1)
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
It's been years since I've thought of that game.
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
For the most part, you Liberal Arts types need only concern yourselves with one type of joint.
To be blunt.
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
Wikipedia says a Gimbal is "a type of coin-operated arcade game where a player attempts to score points by manipulating one or more metal balls on a playfield inside a glass case. " Well, looks like I've learned something today!
Excellent!
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
Wikipedia definition way over specialised. (Score:3, Informative)
Because I'm not arrogant enough (Score:2)
Re:Because I'm not arrogant enough (Score:2)
I certainly do not have the technical expertise or authority to contribute to an encyclopaedia.
Yeah you do. Your example would be a useful addition to the Gimball entry - applications help flesh out the meaning of the thing.
Re:Gimbal? (Score:2)
Do you know the small motorboats, where the boats direction is controlled by turning the engine so it pushes the back of the boat to the side instead of straight forward ? According to the Wikipedia article, the gimbal is a device that lets a rocket do the same.
In other words, a gimballed rocket
Woops! Video Model. - Working Link. (Score:1, Informative)
Here's the working link. [tntech.edu]
I will think you will find... (Score:1)
Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:1)
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:2)
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:3, Informative)
And I'm pretty sure the orginal CSM did not have a gimbled engine. The Saturn did, but with no where near the same range of motion as being discussed here.
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:2)
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:3, Interesting)
Other ways of doing it include using a RCS anyways, with fixed main engines; putting vanes or paddles in the main engine exhaust stream but keeping it fixed; using aerodynamic control fins (only works in an atmosph
Revolutionary? (Score:1)
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:2)
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:1)
Re:Wow...Old News Is So Exciting! (Score:1)
Connecting Hoses (Score:1)
The connecting joints and hoses will be subject to flex failure.
No doubt they will use appropriate materials to counter repetative wear.
Also, as with most space equipment, they will most likely make a redundant system.
Design is a disaster (Score:4, Insightful)
Also the control valving is highly decoupled from the combustion chamber which means high dribble volume and terrible min Ibit. Those simple stepper motors also have to operate at 165R for prolonged periods- this denies you most lubricants and requires special resolvers and the like. There is also no way that such a mechanism can deliver the frequency response of multiple small thrusters pointed in multiple directions. There is also the need to interface either a fiber optic or high voltage spark igniter lead to the thruster across large motions- could be a problem for the non-optical approach.
The issue is : just what problem are we trying to solve? is it cost of the combustion chamber? Number of valves? Weight? Overall complexity? Or is this just an interesting exercise for a kinematics class? The vehicle attitude control function can be performed two active and two standby modules- not four fully active as was used on Apollo. This is highly optimal for cryogenic thrusters since it minimizes the number of lines which must be chilled and pure 6 DOF operations are rare as opposed to simple maneuvers with coupled rotations and translations. This solution was proposed to NASA and rejected as being "just too different from what Apollo did". I cannot imagine them actually flying this contraption.
Re:Design is a disaster (Score:1)
When I build my space port, now I know who to call on for preliminary engineering consultation.
It seems the main concept is to increase exposure of solar cells by allowing the craft to maneuver independantly using gimbles on thrusters.
Why not use the already battle hardened multi directional thrusters found on a Harrier?
Re:Hm.... (Score:1)
Re:Hm.... (Score:2)
Gimballed thrusters? (Score:2, Funny)
Gimball looks to me like a perfectly cromulent word!
This is front page news? (Score:1, Troll)
The original design with millions of RCS thrusters all over the place was stupid anyway.
Link to actual animation (Score:5, Informative)
As a rocket engine gimbal, this doesn't look promising. It's a rather bulky mechanism; the linkage is much larger than the engine bell. It requires fifteen bearings, not including the three motors. The standard solution, a gimbal ring arrangement, only requires four. The bearings also have to handle off-center loads, never a good thing. Bearings in space are headaches; lubrication is tough and temperature changes can jam them.
The motors are in a weak position from a leverage standpoint; the engine thrust is applied directly to the motor shafts, so they (and their gear trains) must be strong enough to overpower the thruster. In a gimbal ring arrangement, the bearings are usually placed so that the center of thrust is at the center of the gimbal, so that the bearings, not the actuators, take almost all the thrust. Very large engines, like the Space Shuttle and Saturn V main engines, have been successfully gimballed that way.
The three motors don't seem to add redundancy; it looks like they all have to be working.
For comparison, here's a simple gimbal from Amadillo Aerospace [armadilloaerospace.com], Carmack's rocket program.
In reality, having many fixed reaction thrusters is probably more reliable than have a few steerable ones. Fewer moving parts.
Re:Link to actual animation (Score:2)
The 3 movable arms look more like two sevens (7) that got mashed together along the flat part.
Here's a screenshot [imagevenue.com] (modified with my crazy mspaint skillz)
I assume the rest of what you said still stands though.
Re:Link to actual animation (Score:3, Informative)
The motors seem to be right out of the Maxon [maxonmotorusa.com] catalog, with the planetary gearhead option on one end and the encoder on the other. Those are good motors (we used one to steer our DARPA Grand Challenge vehicle), but they are not rated for spacecraft operation.
Here's an Aeroflex gimbal [aeroflex.com] that actually is used in space to steer a thruster. Note how the rotationa
Re:Link to actual animation (Score:2, Informative)
What I don't like about this idea is that the thrust seems to be carried by the actuators holding their position. Come to think of it, they're using 3 actuators to accomplish 2 degree of freedom motion. Great. Armadillo's gimbal doesn't have these problems, but it does have a very limited range of motion in comparison.
It's not difficult (I just did it) to imagine a gimbal with the same or better range of motion, loads not significanlty carried by motors, no ho
Re:Link to actual animation (Score:2)
The trouble with a trunnion on a swivel base for this application is that it has a singularity around the straight position. Small changes of direction when pointed nearly straight require big changes in the swivel base position. For a thruster, you need to make small corrections quickly, with minimal actuator motion. (Think WWII antiaircraft guns, forced to slew around frantically when the attackers were overhead, usually missing the target at its point of closest approach.)
Re:Link to actual animation (Score:1)
A video of the actual joint (Score:2)
COOL concept (Score:1)
There's a video (Score:2)
It's quite neat actually.
Too bad the video is a few MB over 50, otherwise they could have coralized the link.
I won't post a link here, because they say that they don't want their server to go down in flames.
I'm pi$$ed. (Score:2)
But guess what friends, when you click on the link, you are rejected because you are not a friggin member.
It might for all I know, be a great idea, but screw em and the camel that rode in on them.
Whyinhell does Taco post these stories without checking them out for veracity?
--
No Cheers, Gene
Tried BugMeNot, and the login they provided (Score:2)
thrusters and reaction wheels (Score:1)
Re:thrusters and reaction wheels (Score:1)
I work in this lab. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I work in this lab. (Score:2)
The nice thing about fixed quads for an RCS system is that their only moving parts are the valves -- pretty simple parts. Moving parts are failure points.
The nice thing about multiple quads vs just a few gimballed thrusters is that they provide redundancy and backup for each other.
But then NASA has always been in love with the comple
Re:I work in this lab. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I work in this lab. (Score:2)
No, the SRB's are re-used (although "crashed and salvaged" might be more accurate). The ET's are disposed of and manufactured new for each flight.
The dies and CNC code is what is costed [sic] most in manufacturing.
Right, so it doesn't cost much more to build 30 than it does to build 5. Even if you're largely hand-building the things (vs using CNC), you still need dies and templates. Besides, with any halfway modern CADD
Re:I work in this lab. (Score:1)
Remanufactured is a more approptiate term. I do apologize once again for my choice of language.
Right, so it doesn't cost much more to build 30 than it does to build 5. Even if you're largely hand-building the things (vs using CNC), you still need dies and templates. Besides, with any halfway modern CADD system, the CNC codes are just another output.
The original reply gave benefit to the current setup due to cost reduction through volume. My point was it isn't cost reduction through volume. I was no
obligatory simpsons... (Score:1)