Venerable Voyager 2 Spacecraft Gets a Tune-up 14 billion Kilometers From Earth

by Nancy Atkinson on November 16, 2011

Every mechanic loves to tinker with a machine to give it optimum operating 
efficiency. But this latest engineering feat involving the Voyager 2 spacecraft 
wins the prize for longest distance tune-up. Akin to servicing an old car to 
increase gas mileage, engineers at JPL sent commands across 14 billion 
kilometers (9 billion miles) out to Voyager 2, enabling it to switch to the 
backup set of thrusters that controls the roll of the spacecraft. This will 
reduce the amount of power that the 34-year-old probe needs to operate, giving 
it better “gas mileage” and — hopefully — the power to operate for at least 
another decade.

The move was a little risky, as these backup roll thrusters were previously 
unused. It meant trusting equipment which has been idle and out in the harsh 
environment of space for 32 years to work — and keep working for the remainder 
of the mission.

“The switchover is pretty permanent – the thrusters are not rated to be reused 
after being unheated,” said the @NASAVoyager2 Twitter feed.

Voyager 2 will save about 11.8 watts of electric power by turning off the 
heater that kept the hydrazine fuel to the primary thrusters warm.

Voyager 1 and 2 are each equipped with six sets, or pairs, of thrusters to 
control the pitch, yaw and roll motions of the spacecraft. With this latest 
command, both spacecraft are now using all three sets of their backup thrusters.

The primary roll thrusters now turned off fired more than 318,000 times. 
Voyager 1 changed to the backup for this same component after 353,000 pulses in 
2004.

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http://www.universetoday.com/91044/venerable-voyager-2-spacecraft-gets-a-tune-up-14-billion-kilometers-from-earth/

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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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