Here's a closer look at three sets of differential gears. The Globus made heavy use of differentials to add or subtract rotational values.
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Here's a closer look at three sets of differential gears. The Globus made heavy use of differentials to add or subtract rotational values. 19 comments
This view of the Globus shows the wiring bundles. There are a lot of wires for a device that is mostly mechanical. For more details on the Globus INK, see my blog post: https://www.righto.com/2023/01/inside-globus-ink-mechanical-navigation.html. @kenshirriff looks like the link doesn't work because it needs www. for the domain
@HeNeArXn It should work now; the original link didn't survive cut-and-paste. @kenshirriff The Mercury spacecraft had a similar mechanical globe called the Earth Path Indicator: https://www.rrauction.com/auctions/lot-detail/340932005505026 @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?) @kenshirriff this is so fascinating. Thank you for the stellar write up on it! @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. |
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.