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#1
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Communications satellite fails:
http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,11986013^401,00.html http://www.spacetoday.net/Summary/2750 Prof spends 18 years on experiment that goes to Saturn, somebody forgets to turn it on: http://apnews.myway.com//article/200...D87O3NAO0.html "Nobody's Perfect!" 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#2
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#3
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![]() Prof spends 18 years on experiment that goes to Saturn, somebody forgets to turn it on: Not the first time someone screwed up. Seems that weeks after Voyager 2 was launched it was expecting messages from JPL. Hearing nothing, it figured that its primary command receiver was broken, and switched to a backup receiver. Well, the problem was that the expected message was never sent. There was a risk that if they allow Voyager to switch back to the primary receiver the switch circuit might break and then become completely deaf. Later the backup receiver's automatic frequency control circuit fails (a filter loop cap shorted to ground it seems). But space probes are designed to still be able to work and get at least some data back if some screwups happen. |
#5
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![]() Len Anderson wrote: Maybe you should instruct them to use a microphone in series with a transmitter lead line, like your idle, Reggie Fessenden. Gosh, what a clever method. Was that AM method adopted by anyone else for voice transmission? No? How could they fail to do so? Everyone else must be stupid, right? You tellum. It's MY assertion that that was one of those satellites you alleged to "have (your) hands in"...Was too lazy to find a trash can for that dust pan you were carrying so you dumped it in the first place you could brush it in to... Lennie, how many of those NASA folks are beating down your door to get you out of retirement to help them fix thier problems???? Steve, K4YZ |
#6
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In article .com,
K4YZ wrote: | wrote: | Communications satellite fails: | | Probably some "radio professional" had his hands "inside the box" | and dropped his dust pan...I mean multimeter... | | Prof spends 18 years on experiment that goes to Saturn, somebody | forgets to turn it on: | | Even Novices and No-Code Techs know to turn the radio on! Yes, but the radio isn't usually millions of miles away by the time they notice it's not on ... In any event, this sort of thing happens closer to Earth too. Many R/C gliders have been lost because somebody put them n the winch (basically a motorized bungee) and launched the plane without ever turning on the receiver in the plane. What happens next generally depends on how well the plane was trimmed and how stable it is -- ranging from flying off never to be seen again to making a lawn dart out of itself ... And I'll bet some ham has put a transponder or repeater or something onto a balloon and launched it, forgetting to turn the stuff on first ![]() -- Doug McLaren, `Once the toothpaste is out of the tube, it's hard to get it back in.' -- H.R. Haldeman |
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