IREC 2018

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Revision as of 06:35, 10 July 2018 by Mjpauly (talk | contribs) (added pronunciations for SHITL, including IPA English pronunciation)
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The team posing with the fully integrated rocket before launching it at the competition.

IREC 2018 was the second SSI IREC team to participate in the Intercollegiate Rocketry Engineering Competition, placing second in the 30k commercial off-the-shelf motor category. The rocket was named Redshift and featured an avionics bay with a long-distance radio system, a reduced-diameter recovery system, a fiberglass airframe with a carbon fiber fin lay-up, a powered decoupling mechanism, and a software-defined GPS payload.

Overview

At four inches in diameter and 128 inches long, the rocket design used a minimum diameter airframe to house the Cessaroni Technology N2900 motor. With a wet mass of 58 pounds (dry mass of 27.8 lbs + 1-7 lbs lead shot ballast), the rocket was built to fly to 30,000 feet.

Goals and Requirements

The goal of the rocket design was to be capable of delivering an 8.8 pound payload to an altitude of 30,000 feet while employing as much student innovation as possible.

System Design

CAD model of the rocket, displaying subsystem layout.

The system went through a few key iterations: at first, a full staging system was considered, then a boosted dart system. After those options turned out to be relatively infeasible due to manpower and expertise issues, as well as the full system redesign that it would have required to conform to smaller airframe diameters, a move was made to a powered decoupling system.

Avionics

The avionics system consisted of multiple custom printed circuit board assemblies (PCBAs), which used direct board-to-board interconnects to eliminate the use of wires.

The main boards in the avionics system were:

  • Skybass, an altimeter developed by John Dean. Testing of Skybass was referred to as SHITL (pronounced "shittle," /ʃɪt(ə)l/)
  • Motherboard, which was the main interface between all other boards and contained the power distribution, arming systems, and e-match firing pathways.
  • Daughtership, a board for mounting the StratoLogger and Raven COTS altimeters.

Recovery

At apogee, the recovery system deployed a small (32") SRAD drogue parachute for a swift, controlled descent (~70 ft/s) that minimized horizontal drift. The deployment of the drogue was triggered by a CO2 canister deployment mechanism.

When the rocket reached an apogee of 1,500 feet, the main SRAD chute (90"), which was retained in the recovery bay by the Tender Retention System, was aimed to deploy for a soft landing. Due to compact packing, the main chute did not successfully deploy.

The recovery bay was selected to have a restricted diameter (2.65"), smaller than that of the rocket airframe (3.9"). This reduced diameter was chosen so that the parachutes would be able to deploy through the restriction in the airframe size caused by the staging ring.

Structures

The structure of the rocket was constructed using COTS fiberglass tubing, with a student-built carbon-fiber fin lay-up. The structures team attempted to build a custom airframe using the X-Winder filament winder, but was unable to produce a usable airframe in time using this method.

Payload

The payload flown on the rocket was a software-define GPS experiment. The goal was to use a COTS software defined radio USB dongle (RTL-SDR), connected to a Raspberry Pi Zero, to capture raw samples from the GPS L1 spectrum. One the rocket is recovered, the raw samples could be downloaded from the Raspberry Pi's SD card and run through tracking algorithms to solve for the rocket's position throughout the flight. The advantages of such a system were specifically for rocketry applications, namely that such a system could be more resistant to losing lock with satellites during high accelerations during flight due to high rates of doppler shift, and that it could provide a way around the GPS COCOM restrictions. The COCOM restrictions limit consumer GPS operation under high velocities and altitudes, which poses an issue for SSI's Spaceshot project.

Staging

The staging project was a decoupling mechanism developed for high-speed decoupling. A stepper motor drives a lead screw, on which a nut rides, lifting and lowering a set of lever arms that turn the vertical motion of the nut into horizontal motion. This horizontal motion actuates a set three clamps which affix two metal rings together. These rings are each mounted on one half of the airframe. By backing off the clamps, the rings, and consequently the airframes, are free to separate.

Issues with the staging system arose when it was near to its completion. The greatest problem was that the stepper motor would have to provide a constant holding torque in order to keep the rocket rigid during the period of time between integration and when separation was required during launch. This application of holding torque required a significant amount of power, and the original battery size resulted in a 20 minute maximum lifetime. Given the lack of adequate space to add enough batteries for a multi-hour lifetime, required in the event of launch delays, and uncertainty about the speed with which the system would drain the battery, it was decided before test launch three that the project should be cut from the final rocket design.

Launch Operations

Launch Operations handled all launch logistics, including food at the launch, lodging for multi-day launches, checklist organization, pre-launch packing, and transportation.

Test Launches

Launch 1

TODO: Attach launch stats and a link to the data?

Launch 2

Launch 3

The Competition

Documentation