
Shipping Monitor
When it comes to shipping payloads for NASA, it takes a lot
more than Styrofoam peanuts and bubble-wrap to insure the safety
of the delicate instruments aboard. NASA's need to track the
vibration and movement of payloads for the Space Shuttle led
to funding for a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
contract between Kennedy Space Center and Silicon Designs, Inc.,
of Issaquah, Washington. The result was a tri-axial data acquisition
system that acquires, stores, and analyzes shock, vibration,
and temperature data during payload transport.
A data acquisition system such as this improves NASA's ability
to determine if any damage has occurred to Space Shuttle payloads
during transport to the launch pad. Operations at Kennedy require
numerous payloads to be transported from assembly and test facilities
to other assembly facilities or the launch pad. Kennedy's Payload
Operations need for this invention led to the Smart Tri-Axial
Acceleration Data Acquisition and Storage System.
Silicon Designs' tri-axial system, known commercially as the
G-LoggerTM Acceleration Acquisition System, is a portable,
self-contained device powered by two D-cell batteries. The system
is sealed for protection from the weather and can be left unattended
for up to three weeks as it collects data.
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Silicon Designs' G-LoggerTM products
provide instant data analysis on the status of payloads during
shipping and handling. |
The G-Logger can store up to four million samples of acceleration
and temperature data in its flash memory. The unit is able to
make maximum use of its eight megabytes of memory by preprocessing
data to screen out unwanted information. G-Logger can measure
and record three directional acceleration components by attaching
the acquisition unit to the payload for monitoring.
The data acquisition unit links up easily to any desktop or
laptop computer, running Windows 95/98, through a serial connection.
Through this linkup, data can be downloaded from the data collection
unit, analyzed, and displayed almost immediately.
There are several industry applications for the G-Logger line
of tools. John Cole, president of Silicon Designs, projects uses
for the line of tools in automotive, shipping, aerospace, and
rotating machining operations. As an automotive application,
the G-Logger could be used for racecar instrumentation, suspension
testing, or as a crash detector. In the shipping industry, the
G-Logger may monitor acceleration, shock and vibration of payloads
during shipping and handling. Finally, it can serve as a flight
vibration monitor for aircraft.
The potential of the G-Logger being used in such a wide array
of applications because of its versatility has Silicon Designs
excited and hopeful about its future prospects.
G-LoggerTM is a trademark of Silicon Designs, Inc.

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