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"Paul Lonsdale" wrote in message
... In article , Brian Reay wrote: some systems rotate the gyros on a tourbillion like mechanism but these defeat one of the objects of a 'strapdown' system). Ah the good old "Carousel". That was the model of INS that had ovens for the rate gyros that ran at 69 degrees F. I think Concorde may be the last British Airways aircraft to use these, all the rest use IRS with laser gyros. I'm not familiar with that particular INS but the technique was (quite) widely used. My background isn't on the civil a/c side but I'd be very surprised if many civil a/c were not using a LINS these days- often as not with a coupled GPS. The big US companies (Litton, Honeywell, etc) saw the potential and threw $ at the problems. The base cost of a LINS tumbled and the low maintained cost did the rest. I had a tour of LINS manufacturing facility back in 1986 and they were already starting to treat LINS systems as a commodity product (ie built to stock not order)- almost unheard of at the time. Prior to this there were some amazing techniques used to make gyros- my favourite (although I never worked on them) had a solid 'ball bearing' which was held electrostatically and rotated at high speed. I forget the details now but, when I learned of it (in the early 80s I would think) it seemed almost too clever to be true. The advent of the 'cheap' RLG (ring laser gyro) saw off some interesting techniques which were replaced by things 'without eye brows' ;-) -- 73 Brian G8OSN www.g8osn.org.uk www.amateurradiotraining.org.uk for FREE training material for the UK Foundation and Intermediate Licences www.phoenixradioclub.org.uk - a RADIO club specifically for those wishing to learn more about amateur radio |
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