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The Globus INK: a mechanical navigation computer for Soviet spaceflight (2023)

193 points| dangle1 | 1 year ago |righto.com | reply

25 comments

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[+] haunter|1 year ago|reply
[+] 4gotunameagain|1 year ago|reply
It's actually the same one I think !

   > Fortunately, CuriousMarc was able to get the globe back into position while ensuring that the gears had the right timing. (Putting the globe back arbitrarily would mess up the latitude and longitude.)
[+] harywilke|1 year ago|reply
Read a very interesting book on the space race from the soviet side. One of the things that stood out was the lack of solid state transistor technology meant that they were using tube transistors in their space craft. This was one of the reasons they had problems doing spacewalks. They couldn't expose the interior of their capsules to space or the electronics would go pop. The Wrong Stuff How the Soviet Space Program Crashed and Burned by John strausbaugh https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/john-strausbaugh/th...
[+] izacus|1 year ago|reply
The title itself should tell you that the book is there to sensationalize and grind an axe, not to actually provide any historical accuracy.

And yep, the author didn't even bother to use primary sources: https://www.thespacereview.com/article/4851/1

It's like recommending a book about Apollo program written by Russians without reading any US documentation.

If there has to be a western author, James Harford's Korolev biography is a better put together look into Soviet space program and actually has some proper academic reviews.

[+] MrBuddyCasino|1 year ago|reply
Why would a vacuum tube „pop“ when exposed to vacuum?
[+] bgnn|1 year ago|reply
that's bullshit. vacuum tubes are used in spacecraft by NASA too. it's likely they are still used. they don't pop in vacuum. plus they're more radiation resistant thwn transistors.
[+] richrichie|1 year ago|reply
Mechanical computers are still used onboard Russian warships. These are meant to function under EMP attacks.
[+] thrownawaysz|1 year ago|reply
Dumb question: How do you jam a device like this? Is it even possible? Example: you want them to land at an incorrect location or doing more orbits than planned
[+] Ugohcet|1 year ago|reply
You don't. This is basically a clock display with extra knobs and dials. It doesn't have any sensors or inputs except 1sec pulse.
[+] rbanffy|1 year ago|reply
Now we need one on the Apollo 8 ball.
[+] kens|1 year ago|reply
As soon as someone loans us an FDAI...
[+] hintymad|1 year ago|reply
Ha, the similar technology that Eridians used to launch Rocky's blip-A.