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From NY times today:
quote Workers also replaced the suspect part of the chain of electronics between controllers and the sensor, known as the point sensor box. The component, like many parts of the shuttle, is based on 1980's technology and still uses components like transistors soldered onto circuit boards. (Today, semiconductor technology places millions of transistors within a single chip.) Some of the transistors, which are made by Fairchild Semiconductor, came from a lot that was suspected of having manufacturing problems, said Steve Poulos, the manager of NASA's vehicle engineering office. /quote Really, man with a budget like that you'd expect them to have somebody redesign those units. That would only cost a couple of thousand, and less then the travel expenses of all the people involved discussing it. I am not sure I take NASA seriously anymore. You must be REALLY of your rocker to use 'reject' parts after all that happened and with that much money available. Where did the money REALLY go! THIS requires an investigation! |
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"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message
news:1121330253.cbbadad49191c0a4ea4827b0c838c237@t eranews... From NY times today: quote Workers also replaced the suspect part of the chain of electronics between controllers and the sensor, known as the point sensor box. The component, like many parts of the shuttle, is based on 1980's technology and still uses components like transistors soldered onto circuit boards. (Today, semiconductor technology places millions of transistors within a single chip.) Some of the transistors, which are made by Fairchild Semiconductor, came from a lot that was suspected of having manufacturing problems, said Steve Poulos, the manager of NASA's vehicle engineering office. /quote Really, man with a budget like that you'd expect them to have somebody redesign those units. That would only cost a couple of thousand, and less then the travel expenses of all the people involved discussing it. I am not sure I take NASA seriously anymore. You must be REALLY of your rocker to use 'reject' parts after all that happened and with that much money available. Where did the money REALLY go! THIS requires an investigation! "A couple of thousand......." Um, yeah. Like you have a clue about it. Ken |
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On a sunny day (Thu, 14 Jul 2005 20:49:40 +1200) it happened "Ken Taylor"
wrote in : "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1121330253.cbbadad49191c0a4ea4827b0c838c237@ teranews... From NY times today: quote Workers also replaced the suspect part of the chain of electronics between controllers and the sensor, known as the point sensor box. The component, like many parts of the shuttle, is based on 1980's technology and still uses components like transistors soldered onto circuit boards. (Today, semiconductor technology places millions of transistors within a single chip.) Some of the transistors, which are made by Fairchild Semiconductor, came from a lot that was suspected of having manufacturing problems, said Steve Poulos, the manager of NASA's vehicle engineering office. /quote Really, man with a budget like that you'd expect them to have somebody redesign those units. That would only cost a couple of thousand, and less then the travel expenses of all the people involved discussing it. I am not sure I take NASA seriously anymore. You must be REALLY of your rocker to use 'reject' parts after all that happened and with that much money available. Where did the money REALLY go! THIS requires an investigation! "A couple of thousand......." Um, yeah. Like you have a clue about it. Yep I do, I am electronic designer. And that is kids stuff. But maybe NASA fired all E designers long ago, and replaced with 'managers' or idiots like you? Complete morons to save on a 12 cent part. From a billion $$ project. Same guys who spend 51 billion on an aniti missile system that does not work? **** off. |
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![]() "A couple of thousand......." Um, yeah. Like you have a clue about it. Yep I do, I am electronic designer. Obviously not a professional one. Or maybe you just work out of the side of a van selling breadboarded products. Redesigning any of the consumer products I work with to, say, change one transistor type, is a minimum cost of six to nine months and $100,000 of direct costs in engineering, QA testing, FCC recertification, perhaps also UL relisting (that is an instant ~$35,000 cost for our type of product), and more. That's merely to meet ISO900x, FCC and AHJ requirements. NASA's application also has to meet aviation safety standards. Even if the change is as trivial as just switching to a different transistor vendor, I'd be willing to bet the costs START at $250,000 and a year's engineering and qual time - and that's probably a conservative estimate. |
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![]() "Pooh Bear" wrote in message ... wrote: [snipped] That's why light aviation aircraft still use carburettors with their attendant intake icing and falling out of the sky problems when a simple replacement with fuel injection would fix the problem. It's too expensive to certify the safer solution often. Graahm I'm not sure, but don't light aircraft engines have to run without battery power. Graham H |
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Jan Panteltje wrote:
On a sunny day (Thu, 14 Jul 2005 20:49:40 +1200) it happened "Ken Taylor" wrote in : "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1121330253.cbbadad49191c0a4ea4827b0c838c237 @teranews... From NY times today: quote Workers also replaced the suspect part of the chain of electronics between controllers and the sensor, known as the point sensor box. The component, like many parts of the shuttle, is based on 1980's technology and still uses components like transistors soldered onto circuit boards. (Today, semiconductor technology places millions of transistors within a single chip.) Some of the transistors, which are made by Fairchild Semiconductor, came from a lot that was suspected of having manufacturing problems, said Steve Poulos, the manager of NASA's vehicle engineering office. /quote Really, man with a budget like that you'd expect them to have somebody redesign those units. That would only cost a couple of thousand, and less then the travel expenses of all the people involved discussing it. I am not sure I take NASA seriously anymore. You must be REALLY of your rocker to use 'reject' parts after all that happened and with that much money available. Where did the money REALLY go! THIS requires an investigation! "A couple of thousand......." Um, yeah. Like you have a clue about it. Yep I do, I am electronic designer. Obviously not a very good one if you can come out with crap like you posted. And that is kids stuff. But maybe NASA fired all E designers long ago, and replaced with 'managers' or idiots like you? Complete morons to save on a 12 cent part. *sigh* it's not the cost of the part. Just how many FMEACAs and certification processes have you been through? How expensive would it be to put an IC through a full FMEACA? It'd take years. I use to be a design engineer working on Safety Critical System (Level 4), it's damned expensive to just replace a part From a billion $$ project. Same guys who spend 51 billion on an aniti missile system that does not work? **** off. Says he who is talking out of his arse |
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On Thu, 14 Jul 2005 11:20:25 +0100, Pooh Bear
wrote: wrote: "A couple of thousand......." Um, yeah. Like you have a clue about it. Yep I do, I am electronic designer. Obviously not a professional one. Or maybe you just work out of the side of a van selling breadboarded products. Redesigning any of the consumer products I work with to, say, change one transistor type, is a minimum cost of six to nine months and $100,000 of direct costs in engineering, QA testing, FCC recertification, perhaps also UL relisting (that is an instant ~$35,000 cost for our type of product), and more. That's merely to meet ISO900x, FCC and AHJ requirements. NASA's application also has to meet aviation safety standards. Even if the change is as trivial as just switching to a different transistor vendor, I'd be willing to bet the costs START at $250,000 and a year's engineering and qual time - and that's probably a conservative estimate. Which is why they continue to use junk parts. Too expensive to replace with something that works reliably on account of the paperwork. That's why light aviation aircraft still use carburettors with their attendant intake icing and falling out of the sky problems when a simple replacement with fuel injection would fix the problem. It's too expensive to certify the safer solution often. I am guessing a $1000 redesign will probably take 10 years and millions of dollars to test and certify .... Well it would if you use the software testers I used to work with.... |
#9
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#10
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... "A couple of thousand......." Um, yeah. Like you have a clue about it. Yep I do, I am electronic designer. Obviously not a professional one. Or maybe you just work out of the side of a van selling breadboarded products. Redesigning any of the consumer products I work with to, say, change one transistor type, is a minimum cost of six to nine months and $100,000 of direct costs in engineering, QA testing, FCC recertification, perhaps also UL relisting (that is an instant ~$35,000 cost for our type of product), and more. That's merely to meet ISO900x, FCC and AHJ requirements. NASA's application also has to meet aviation safety standards. Even if the change is as trivial as just switching to a different transistor vendor, I'd be willing to bet the costs START at $250,000 and a year's engineering and qual time - and that's probably a conservative estimate. Wouldn't it also have to be specifically space certified, and hence tested against long term radiation exposure? Also, I would have thought that the repeated acceleration (G force) testing of a space certified part would be have to be far more extensive. $250k as a conservative starting point looks about right. |
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