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Ken Shirriff

The orbital period could be adjusted ±5 minutes. Followers riding on a spiral cone cam turned at adjustable speeds based on their position, slow at the top, faster at the bottom. Three adjustments (minutes, tenths, and hundredths) were added by differential gears.

34 comments
Ken Shirriff

Latitude and longitude were displayed on indicators. They depended on complex trig functions, computed by specially-shaped cams. Coincidentally, the latitude indicator matches the Ukrainian flag. 🇺🇦

Ken Shirriff

The globe showed geographical features as well as the boundaries of the USSR and politically-aligned regions. As well as tracking their position, cosmonauts could judge the safety of potential landing sites, both physically and politically.

Ken Shirriff

But why does the globe have dots indicating NASA communication sites such as Goldstone, Bermuda, and Merritt Island? This Globus must be from the Apollo-Soyuz project (1975), where an Apollo spacecraft docked with Soyuz in orbit.

Ken Shirriff

To determine the landing position, the globe rotated through a specified angle, simulating a partial orbit. A drive motor did this rotation, stopping when the swing arm hit the adjustable angle limit switch. A second limit switch handled rotation back to the orbital position.

Ken Shirriff

This photo shows the Globus in the Soyuz-TM control panel (1986). Soviet control panels were very different from American ones, grids of buttons instead of masses of switches and meters.
Source: web.mit.edu/slava/space/essays

Ken Shirriff

Here's a closer look at three sets of differential gears. The Globus made heavy use of differentials to add or subtract rotational values.

Ken Shirriff replied to Ken

Although mostly mechanical, the Globus used relays to control the landing position motor. Pairs of diodes across the relays absorbed inductive kickback. A potentiometer to output the orbital position as a voltage.

Ken Shirriff replied to Ken

This view of the Globus shows the wiring bundles. There are a lot of wires for a device that is mostly mechanical.

Ken Shirriff replied to Ken

For more details on the Globus INK, see my blog post: righto.com/2023/01/inside-glob.
Thanks to Marcel for providing the unit and letting us disassemble it. I hope to get it operational, so stay tuned.

spooky otter.php replied to Ken
@kenshirriff looks like the link doesn't work because it needs www. for the domain
Ken Shirriff replied to Sven

@HeNeArXn It should work now; the original link didn't survive cut-and-paste.

Émile Grégoire replied to Ken

@kenshirriff The Mercury spacecraft had a similar mechanical globe called the Earth Path Indicator: rrauction.com/auctions/lot-det

Sven replied to Émile

@emgre @kenshirriff interestingly that one doesn't seem to be driven at a great circle, so I wonder how that works reliably (since then it can't be fixed to the globe and be able to show every position?)

Batou replied to Ken
Fletch…? replied to Ken

@kenshirriff this is so fascinating. Thank you for the stellar write up on it!

barks replied to Ken

@kenshirriff I suspect that its accuracy would have been poor, going by the mechanical nav kit I’ve used or seen used in Jaguar and Harrier.

C. Scott Ananian (he/him)

@kenshirriff I'm fascinated by #9, which is right at the intersection of Honduras, Guatemala, and Belize. The nearest big city near the mark is San Pedro Sula, Honduras. But the closet *soviet-aligned* country would be Nicaragua, even though the mar is really too far west for that. But in 2017 ROSCOSMOS opened a GLOSNASS station in Laguna de Nejapa, Nicaragua, so its not impossible there was earlier coordination.

Pavel A. Samsonov

@kenshirriff Huh, North Korea is outside of the red border?

KanaMauna

@PavelASamsonov @kenshirriff I guess they knew which friends were reliable and which ones were not.

Pavel A. Samsonov

@KanaMauna @kenshirriff Then it's weird to have Yugoslavia on there given that Tito was explicitly anti-Soviet by 1975.

KanaMauna

@kenshirriff @PavelASamsonov True. Maybe this item dates to early in the Apollo-Soyuz project, which started in 1972?

Pavel A. Samsonov replied to Ken

@kenshirriff @KanaMauna Yeah but Yugoslavia split with the USSR in 1948, there's no time during the space race when it would have been considered an ideological ally

первичный бульон с пельмешками replied to Pavel A. Samsonov

@PavelASamsonov @kenshirriff @KanaMauna
They somewhat reconciled under Khruschev (see the Belgrade declaration of 1955). The Hungarian revolution soured the things, but probably Yugoslavia was still a better bet than China or NK (due to the fresh Sino-Soviet split)

Bookeater

@kenshirriff as a kid of the '80, that's a strange series of country boundaries in the European zone, I mean, Poland with both Germanies?

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