T
TheQuickBrownFox
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
OK, I'll buy it. Name the design/experiment?
I do not know what the experiment was. Our device was a fully potted,
conduction cooled HVPS of about .3 cubic feet in size for the finished
product.
On the pad, I have two (perhaps more now) IR thermometers that have the
longest optical focus we ever made at 1000 ft for a ten foot spot, and
had to detect within a one foot spot inside that target area.
We had no way to calibrate it as we had no 1000 ft range to set up a
Black Body source for it. So we extrapolated and hoped it worked in the
field. Itdid.Still does, I imagine.
It observes the protected area of the blast chutes at launch time for a
burn through.
I'm interested.
More likely still looking for 'ammo' to continue the same game you were
playing when you returned to the group.
Not many pieces of network system test equipment (that I designed and
built as a power engineer) get thrown into space unfortunately...
Not too many bit rate world records being sought in micro-gravity.
OR
medical x-ray calibration equipment (from my previous career of 12
years as a medical electronics engineer),
I made a nice 50kV, 250W X-ray supply for LANL some years back. Made
some nice lower wattage, super clean supplies for x-ray inspection
industry as well.
worst luck. So unless the
engineering has anything to do with space exploration it has no value?
That is not what was inferred, jerk.
Poor us...not many real engineers around I guess.
Let's just say that at least one has a problem with the bigger picture.