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Voyager Uranus encounter 0.2lbf T/VA short pulse test reportThe attitude control thrusters on the Voyager spacecraft were tested for operation at electrical pulse widths of less than the current 10-millisecond minimum to reduce impulse bit and, therefore, reduce image smear of pictures taken during the Uranus encounter. Thrusters with the identical configuration of the units on the spacecraft were fired in an altitude chamber to characterize impulse bit and impulse bit variations as a function of electrical pulse widths and to determine if the short pulses decreased thruster life. Pulse widths of 4.0 milliseconds provide approximately 45 percent of the impulse provided by a 10-ms pulse, and thruster-to-thruster and pulse-to-pulse variation is approximately plus or minus 10 percent. Pulse widths shorter than 4 ms showed wide variation, and no pulse was obtained at 3 ms. Three thrusters were each subjected to 75,000 short pulses of 4 ms or less without performance degradation. A fourth thruster exhibited partial flow blockage after 13,000 short pulses, but this was attributed to prevous test history and not short pulse exposure. The Voyager attitude control thrusters should be considered flight qualified for short pulse operation at pulse widths of 4.0 ms or more.
Document ID
19870004800
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Date Acquired
September 5, 2013
Publication Date
January 17, 1986
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Exploration
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-179950
JPL-9950
NAS 1.26:179950
RRC-86-R-1025
Report Number: NASA-CR-179950
Report Number: JPL-9950
Report Number: NAS 1.26:179950
Report Number: RRC-86-R-1025
Accession Number
87N14233
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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