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Space Station Solar Equipment Showing Damage

bhmit1 writes "The latest space walk has turned up some bad news for the problematic solar panels: metal shavings. From the article: "The rotary joint, 10 feet in diameter, has experienced intermittent vibrations and power spikes for nearly two months. Space station managers were hoping a thermal cover or bolt might be hanging up the mechanism. That would have been relatively easy to fix, so they were disheartened when Daniel Tani radioed down that metal shavings were everywhere. 'It's quite clear that it's metal-to-metal grating or something, and it's widespread,' Tani said.""

2 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. Will a replacement fix it? by _merlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I noted that they intend to fit a replacement joint, and are limiting the travel of the solar panel(s) in the mean time. My question is, do they know what the source of the problem actually is? Is it a manufacturing defect, damage or wear and tear in the currently fitted joint? If it is, replacing it is a reasonable solution. But if it isn't - i.e. if there's a design or operational problem - replacing it will just be a temporary band-aid, and the same thing will happen again sooner or later.

  2. One hell of a gear box by BadHaggis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The SARJ, 10.5 ft in diameter and 40 inches long, will maintain the solar arrays in an optimal orientation to the sun while the entire space station orbits the Earth once every 90 minutes. Drive motors in the SARJ will move the arrays through 360 degrees of motion at four degrees per minute. The joints must rotate the arrays smoothly without imparting vibrations to the laboratories and habitation modules on the station that would impact microgravity-processing activities. At the same time, 60 kW of power at 160 volts and multiple data channels are carried across each joint by copper "roll rings" contained within. From: Google Cached Lockeed Martin Article on the Panels.
    The joints in question are huge and as this article points out any vibrations back into the ISS could cause problems with other equipment or experiments. Additionally power is transferred back to the ISS through copper rings in the unit itself. Any metal which provides a better circuit path than the copper would cause the power spikes.

    Opening this thing up would be something like trying to rebuild an Automatic Transmission, then add the complexity of doing this in micro-gravity. It would probably be easier for NASA to send up a complete replacement instead of trying clean out all of the metal shavings and replace the parts that are damaged.
    --
    Homo homini lupus