Major Chinese Satellite Suffers Complete Failure 80
cyclone96 writes "China's most advanced satellite, the direct broadcast Sinosat 2, apparently suffered a major failure on orbit following launch on October 29. None of the solar arrays or antennas deployed on the spacecraft, and the Chinese are now mulling whether to destroy the spacecraft in the atmosphere. The article provides the following analysis:
"The catastrophic breakdown of China's new Sinosat 2 direct broadcast satellite is the worst spacecraft failure in the history of the Chinese space program and a major setback to China's development of a new generation of larger, more powerful civilian and military satellites.""
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You still use him? He and his brother were our best suppliers, but we had problems with one item. They kept sending us blackboards, but we explained we need the kind you can write on with markers. After several rounds of this they finally explained that two Wongs don't make a white. So we had to change.
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Re:Plastic junk (Score:5, Funny)
Legend has it, a few years later a UK company placed an order for a million items (history doesn't relate what they were), with a note attached saying "We would expect your quality control to be so good that there would be no more than three faulty parts per million".
Fast forward a couple of months, the order came off the boat and arrived in their warehouse with a note saying "Please find enclosed the three faulty items under separate wrapper, though we can't imagine why you want them."
Re:Plastic junk (Score:4, Funny)
My dad (who worked for Rolls Royce Aerospace in Bristol) has a similar story about aerospace engines which kept blowing up after being shipped and fitted at a particular location in the far east. Eventually they sent someone out there to find out why the engines kept failing. They determined it was because some critical bolts weren't torqued up after fitting. In the end they traced it to a translation anomoly, which indicated that the installer should "check bolts for looseness" - so the installer carefully loosened the appropriate bolts.
Urban legend, I'm sure, but a great story nonetheless.
Audiophile tastes aren't exactly a good metric... (Score:4, Interesting)
If the audiophool market is purchasing Chinese products, it is out of last resort. The Chinese are among the last countries still manufacturing some types of vacuum tubes used in high-end sound gear.
Re:Audiophile tastes aren't exactly a good metric. (Score:5, Funny)
I was critiquing the ability of the audiophool crowd to distinguish worthwhile products from technobabble, marketing scams, and flat-out bullshit. And how an endorsement by said group says absolutely NOTHING about the technical merits of a product. Here are only a few examples of the utter BULLSHIT that the audiophools buy into:
A wooden volume control KNOB for $500 (need 2 for stereo, BTW) that promises buyers that "The sound becomes much more open and free flowing with a nice improvement in resolution. Dynamics are better and overall naturalness is improved.":
http://www.referenceaudiomods.com/Merchant2/merch
Special "secret mojo" paint to apply to the D/A chip inside your CD player to create the mystical "tube sound":
http://www.altmann.haan.de/tubeolator/ [altmann.haan.de]
A $1500 POWER CABLE that is described like a glass of fine wine. "The Clairvoyant's signature is engaging, energetic, and bristling with light and microdynamic life"; "lifelike timing and pace" coupled with "clarity, definition, lithe touch, and articulation throughout the lower registers."
http://www.soundstage.com/revequip/audiomagic_cla
The previously mentioned bottle of magic pebbles to increase listening pleasure:
http://www.machinadynamica.com/machina31.htm [machinadynamica.com]
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You win the thread.
Damnit, where are my mod points when I need them?!
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Please provide an address where we can send you your new "teh intarwebs". Shipping and Handling extra.
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A wooden volume control KNOB for $500 (need 2 for stereo, BTW) that promises buyers that "The sound becomes much more open and free flowing with a nice improvement in resolution. Dynamics are better and overall naturalness is improved."
First of all, the knobs have a bronze insert for additional radial strength and improved harmonic quality.
Secondly, you ignore the multiple layers of C37 lacquer, which would otherwise result in over-dampening of the highest frequencies.
Finally, the knobs are only $485, a steal considering the labor that have gone into their design and testing.
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How do you pronounce that? eighty-ies? Maybe you could write 8ies, which I kinda like. Or plain old '80s.
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At least they actually make things in China. The only things we make here anymore are cars...
And aircraft, computer chips, and lots of other high-tech stuff. But so what? Boo hoo, we don't have much commodity product manufacturing around here. Because such manufacturing is basically a solved problem these days, so everybody knows how to do it and there's relatively little profit to be had from it. We've got way more profitable activities to engage in here, things which are more befitting a highly-educate
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HahaHAhaHAahhaha.
Most of the people in the US are very poorly educated. They don't know their ass from... hey, what's that in the ground over there? They speak only one language.
Our entire school system K-12 is specifically designed to produce factory workers. It hasn't seen any significant overhaul since that original desig
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Most of the people in the US are very poorly educated.
Sorry, this is total bullshit. You can just make things up, or you can go down to http://www.uis.unesco.org/ [unesco.org] or any of a thousand other places to see how our education stacks up. We produce one of the best-trained workforces in the world, and your wishful superiority complex (let me guess, you're the one guy who's so gifted that the horrible public education here didn't ruin you, right?) doesn't change that a bit.
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Actually, while it didn't ruin me, it harmed me. When I was young I went to a private school for a couple years, then we ran out of money, and I had to go to public school. I had been two years ahead, but they put me in kindergarten because I was five. I spent a year sticking president's head stickers on construction paper flags and shit like that. Then when I got to first grade it was discovered I had done it all before so they bumped me up to second (I had a nasty habit of correcting my teacher's mistake
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Bad headlines, worse summaries (Score:4, Insightful)
Upshot? Lots of people have lost lots of sats. This ain't the first, won't be the last. So let's quit with the "made in China" fnarr fnarrs before they begin, eh?
From TFA: "...the worst spacecraft failure in the history of the Chinese space program"
Upshot? Yeah, but you can say that about every new launch which incorporates tech that's never been flown before. And you can say that about every failure in every "all-up" development program. Cheaper, faster --- gotta be a problem here somewhere...
From TFA: "Although it is a painful way to initiate reform, such a major loss has prompted Chinese aerospace to rise to higher standards in the past. Chinese quality control measures were tightened across the Long March booster program after fatal launch accidents at Xichang in the early 1990s. [...] The loss of such a critical spacecraft could spark similar reforms in the satellite industry"
Upshot? A big loss, but probably a bigger opportunity.
And that's about all you need to know.
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Re:Bad headlines, worse summaries (Score:5, Funny)
what the hell are fnarr fnarrs?
Native Chinese predators that feed exclusively on panda meat.
Don't you watch the Discovery Channel?
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It is not uncommon for spacecraft to have individual hinges and latches on single solar arrays or antennas hang up. Such a mechanism failure is, for example, suspected in the apparent loss of the NASA Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft (AW&ST Nov. 27, p. 53). But to have all major solar array and antenna deployments halted by a broader failure is almost unheard of in modern satellite operations.
Emphasis mine. It's all in the scale. The thing is space junk. No functions. Dead. Three years to replace.
J
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That got me wondering about their metrics (how they measure this).
From TFA: "...the worst spacecraft failure in the history of the Chinese space program" Is this the worst in dollar (Yuan) amounts lost by shareholders? It this the worst in terms of totality and completeness of loss of function (there are functions left on the spacecraft, as the Chinese believe they can force it to re-enter the atmosphere and prevent it from becoming "really expensive space junk") or is this the worst in terms of the amount
Bad taglinr, better summary (Score:2)
Err... no. It was actually an Atheist leader who reckoned that Euthanasia “might not be bad” [lifesite.net].
Maybe next month? You might get one of the people from a Persian or Babylonian religion, who advocate human sacrifices for Christmas.
wikipedia (Score:4, Interesting)
As a comparison, the article linked here at
worst spacecraft failure involved loss of life (Score:4, Interesting)
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I know this is not on-topic, but I just had an interesting question come to mind, and I realize it is one to which I don't have a satisfactory answer because of all the possible scenarios: Is the loss of life bad?
There are so many nuances to that question I don't even know where to begin, other to know that it is an important and probably overlooked philosophical question. I know the first response of most people is "Of course the loss of life is bad!" but then you have to ask - "What life?" Because there
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There is no meaningful "worst" in overall terms because there are so many independent apples and oranges metrics of which it could be the "worst".
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Eh, I'm in a good mood today, so:
I didn't say anything about an event (loss of life, in this case) as being acceptable - I asked if it was bad. Those are distinct concepts actually. In some cases, what is acceptable for one audience is not acceptable to another audience, and I also think that 'good' or 'bad' is independent of acceptance (though I hope that people accept the good and reject the bad). (Note that if you claim that one group's acceptance is more acceptable than another, you have to have some r
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Re:worst spacecraft failure involved loss of life (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know, this is China we're talking about. Loss of life can be a result of just having your blog veer off course.
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Nah. Because he gets really mad when he spends all morning using his nose to find one stray molecule of quail scent under a bush in 200 acres of fields and brush, and then stands there for ten minutes on point to show me where it is, and exhibits saint-like patience while I kick around in the cover to get the bird up into the air where it's safe to use a shotgun... and then... miss. You've never seen such a look of reproach. Plus, quail is some very tasty meat, and we usually
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Sign me up! I've found it's really hard to actually take anybody out with hitting a stupid little ball at them. Plus even when you get a good one off, etiquette requires that you actually warn them that it's on its way. I'll bet nobody tells them quails nuthin.
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A few other folks have pointed out that the Long March failure was (obviously) a lot worse. I think the author of the piece was making a distinction between a launch vehicle failure (what you have when a rocket flies into a village) and a spacecraft failure (the satellite is put into orbit by the launcher, but it doesn't work).
Sad... (Score:2)
A little more competition in the race for space is a good thing in my opinion.
WTF !! (Score:5, Informative)
How To Destroy? (Score:2)
If none of the antannae deployed then how can they destroy it?
On the other hand, it could make great target...
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The antennas that didn't deploy are part of the payload (direct broadcast television). Most satellites use a different, low bandwidth omnidirectional antenna for commanding and engineering data. So the satellite is basically alive, but without the payload antennas deployed (or the solar arrays, which doesn't leave enough power to run the payload) it's not usable for anything (except maybe for some engineering tests since it's now essentially dis
Worst ever? No way... (Score:3, Informative)
In my humble opinion, this description is a load of garbage. The loss of control of a satellite in orbit is minor compared to the of a Long March launch vehicle to the point that it exploded moments after launch and flaming debris crashed into the ground killing (officially) 6 people in 1998 [washingtonpost.com]. The real number of deaths was probably much higher (some estimates place it at about 200). Given the cover-up of that event, I suppose the present example might still be the most serious recent failure the Chinese government has allowed their news media to talk about in any detail. Given the actual record to date, this event seems more like business as usual, but this time effecting a Chinese satellite, rather than a customer from somewhere else that the Chinese space agency could try to blame as the source of the problem (see the linked article for previous examples).
In Other News, US Space Laser Test Successful (Score:1, Offtopic)
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In Soviet China (Score:2)