Verification Method
Transcription
Verification Method
Electron Losses and Fields Investigation Subsystem PDR Mechanical/Structural Subsystem Christopher Yu Los Angeles, California December 1, 2014 1 REVIEW BOARD MEMBERS Name Organization Andrew Lamborn JPL Marc Lane JPL 2 MECH PEER PDR REVIEW Science Overview Vassilis Angelopoulos Los Angeles, California, October 23, 2014 3 OBJECTIVE AND SCOPE OF PDR peer PDR objective: demonstrate design meets requirements peer PDR is an opportunity for design team to: Show well defined subsystem scope and responsibilities Show clear definition of personnel roles and responsibilities Expose design to experts in an open and relaxed environment where technical discussions can take place Identify potential engineering and implementation flaws to increase probability of success by taking corrective action early in program Provide feedback on the detailed design of the subsystem peer PDR chair will coordinate review team minutes as follows: Request for action (RFAs) by team, closed after initiator concurrence Recommendations, to be considered without need for closure by initiator Observations, points of information to be noted in the review report 4 MECHANISMS TEAM Name Responsibility year Christopher Yu Team Lead + Harnessing Lead 2 Noah Kang Harnessing 1 Priscilla Tsui Harnessing 2 Anthony Gildemeister Harnessing 2 Gary Chao Static Lead 3 Eric Qu Static 1 Erica Chung Vibe Lead 3 Guillerme Albertini Vibe 1 Nathan Chung Vibe 3 Arada Dermegerderchian Vibe 2 Daniel Lee Mech Lead 4 Katie Murphey Mech + Student Advisor 4 5 MECH TEAM ORGANIZATION 6 EXPLODED VIEW 7 TABLE OF CONTENTS Requirements Operational Concept Structural Organization Chassis Design Avionics Unit Design Assembly Procedures Finite Element Analysis Mechanisms Harnessing Implementation Schedule Safety/ Facilities Problems 8 Requirements and Specifications 9 STRUCTURES REQUIREMENTS REQ ID STRC‐01 STRC‐02 STRC‐03 STRC‐04 STRC‐05 STRC‐06 STRC‐07 STRC‐08 Requirement Parent(s) Aluminum alloys used in structural applications shall SYS‐25 be resistant to general corrosion, pitting, intergranular corrosion, and stress corrosion cracking. ELFIN shall be capable of constraining all deployables SYS‐25 Rails shall have a minimum width of 8.5mm. SYS‐25 The rails shall not have a surface roughness greater SYS‐25 than 1.6 μm. The edges of the rails shall be rounded to a radius of SYS‐25 at least 1 mm The ends of the rails on the +‐X face shall have a minimum surface area of 6.5 mm x 6.5 mm contact SYS‐25 area At least 75% of the rail shall be in contact with the P‐ POD rails. 25% of the rails may be recessed and no SYS‐25 part of the rails shall exceed the specification. Aluminum 7075, 6061, 5005, and/or 5052 shall be SYS‐25 used for both the main structure and the rails. Verification Method I: inspection I: inspection I: inspection I: inspection I: inspection QA inspection Design and QA inspection Design and QA inspection 10 STRUCTURES REQUIREMENTS REQ ID Requirement Parent(s) The CubeSat rails and standoff, which contact the P‐POD rails and adjacent STRC‐09 CubeSat standoffs, shall be hard anodized SYS‐25 aluminum to prevent any cold welding within the P‐POD. All antennas shall be capable of deploying STRC‐10 while ELFIN is tumbling. SYS‐25 The ratio of the major moment of inertia to STRC‐11 the intermediate moment of inertia shall be SYS‐25 greater than 1.2 The structure shall not use magnetic SYS‐21 STRC‐12 materials. The spacecraft shall be capable of deploying SYS‐25 STRC‐13 the stacer The center of gravity shall be located within 2 cm from its geometric center in the Y and Z SYS‐25 STRC‐15 directions Verification Method I: inspection Thorough testing of all deployable antennas to ensure a minimum 99.9% success rate. CAD and spin testing. T: magnetic cleanliness testing CAD CAD 11 STRUCTURES REQUIREMENTS REQ ID Requirement The center of gravity shall be located within 7 cm from its geometric center in the X direction. The length, rotations and bending of the stacer shall be STRC‐17 known to at least TBD cm The Structures subsystem shall not exceed the mass STRC‐18 allocated by Systems The Structures subsystem shall not exceed the power STRC‐19 allocated in the ELFIN system power budget STRC‐16 Parent(s) SYS‐25 SYS‐25 Verification Method CAD deployable tests SYS‐14 CAD SYS‐22 Documentation 12 Spacecraft Operational Concept 13 OPERATIONAL CONCEPT Structures/Mechanisms Timeline: 1. Exit from PPOD (1 minute) 2. Deploy antennas (12-24 hours) 3. Deploy stacer (2nd day to 2 weeks) 14 Spacecraft Structural Organization 15 ORGANIZATION ▪ Divided into three subunits ▪ Avionics ▪ Stacer ▪ Energetic Particle Detectors 16 MAJOR COMPONENTS Torquer Coils ▪ Integrated with chassis as additional structural element ▪ Also used for mounting components Stacer Assembly ▪ Helps with structural stability of the spacecraft ▪ Replaces the original cross braces found in the Tensor-82 chassis 17 MASS REQUIREMENT - STRUCTURES REQ ID STRC‐18 Requirement Parent(s) The Structures subsystem shall not exceed the mass allocated by Systems Structures & Mechanisms Component Chassis EMI shield Battery holder Fasteners Brackets Antenna holder Tuna can Harnessing Stacer Maturity P P P P P P P L P SYS‐14 Qty 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Verification T: Components will be weighed Unit mass 220.93 41.00 60.00 57.35 32.00 6.16 27.47 50.00 386.00 CBE 220.9 41.0 60.0 57.4 32.0 6.2 27.5 50.0 386.0 Verification Document Mass Budget Margin 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 20% 15% CBE+Margin 254.1 47.2 69.0 66.0 36.8 7.1 31.6 60.0 443.9 Mass allocated for Structures & Mechanisms: 1020 g Current best estimate (CBE): 880.9 g Margin: 15.6 % (134.6 g) CBE + Margin: 1015.5 g Contingency: 4.5 g 18 Chassis Design 19 MATERIAL SELECTION REQ ID STRC‐08 Requirement Parent(s) Aluminum 7075, 6061, 5005, and/or 5052 shall be used for both SYS‐25 the main structure and the rails. Verification Method Verification Document 014‐ Design and Al_Alloy_tradestud QA inspection y‐00 6061 vs. 7075 7075 has more promising mechanical properties 6000 series has excellent corrosion resistance to the 7000 series Cost/mass tradeoffs from using 7075 level of machinability Notable Statistics 6061-T6 7075-T6 Tensile Yield Strength mPa (@100C) 275 434 Tensile Yield Strength mPa (@-80C) 310 503 Cost (12’’x12’’x1’’) USD 412 635 Density (g/cc) 2.7 2.81 20 CHASSIS V1 ▪ Original Chassis Design ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ Aluminum 6061-T6 Based off the Boeing Tensor 82 Chassis Customized to reduce mass, mounting brackets added Four cross braces connecting the two side frames 21 CHASSIS V1 PROBLEMS Problem Solution Back out from screws connecting the cross braces to the side frames Implement helicoils in the necessary locations in the chassis, and utilize chemical adhesives Torsion and parallelogramming in xy plane Eliminate cross brace design Lack of structural integrity in cross braces Eliminate cross brace design 22 CHASSIS DESIGN V2 REQ ID STRC‐ 03 STRC‐ 04 STRC‐ 05 Requirement Rails shall have a minimum width of 8.5mm. The rails shall not have a surface roughness greater than 1.6 μm. The edges of the rails shall be rounded to a radius of at least 1 mm The ends of the rails on the +‐X face shall have a STRC‐ minimum surface area of 6.5 mm x 6.5 mm contact 06 area At least 75% of the rail shall be in contact with the P‐ STRC‐ POD rails. 25% of the rails may be recessed and no 07 part of the rails shall exceed the specification. Parent(s) Verification Method SYS‐25 I: inspection SYS‐25 I: inspection SYS‐25 I: inspection SYS‐25 QA inspection SYS‐25 Design and QA inspection Verification Document Chassis Isometric View 23 CHASSIS DESIGN V2 ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ Addresses problems arisen from UNP EDR Easier machinibaility Side rails rounded with fillet of 0.050 inches Less-than flush top hat allows for maximum PPOD rail contact 24 CHASSIS DESIGN V2 Rail Drawing View 25 CHASSIS DESIGN V2 Top Hat Drawing View Top Hat Trimetric View 26 Avionics Unit Design 27 AVIONICS UNIT OBJECTIVES REQ ID Requirement STRC‐12 The structure shall not use magnetic materials. Parent(s) SYS‐21 Verification Method T: magnetic cleanliness testing Verification Document Design Goals: ▪ Houses the 4 Li-ion batteries ▪ Fill a single U of the total 3U ▪ Contain the necessary 7 PCB’s and He-82 Radio ▪ Encased in EMI shield ▪ Allow for harnessing ease to the EPD boards and –X panel Avionics Unit Isometric View 28 AVIONICS UNIT OVERVIEW Avionics Stack Li-Ion Batteries Radio 29 BATTERY HOLDER REDESIGN V1 Isometric ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ V2 Isometric Increased cupping of ends of battery cells Increased strength of mounts Large divots next to the battery terminals for easier harnessing access Holes in top and bottom mount for securing EMI shield Realistic machinability 30 Assembly Procedures 31 ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES REQUIREMENTS Objective: Document the spacecraft-level assembly procedures. Success Requirement: Document can be followed, through assembly with 3D printed components ▪ ▪ Each step will have a list of required parts and the bolt’s torque specs. Torque specs will abide to MSFC-STD-486B 32 EPD AND AVIONICS UNIT 33 INTEGRATING SUBASSEMBLIES 34 INTEGRATING SUBASSEMBLIES 35 INTEGRATING SUBASSEMBLIES 36 INTEGRATING SUBASSEMBLIES 37 SOLAR PANEL AND X PANELS 38 SPACECRAFT CONFIGURATIONS REQ ID STRC‐15 STRC‐16 Requirement Parent(s) The center of gravity shall be located within 2 cm from its geometric center in SYS‐25 the Y and Z directions The center of gravity shall be located within 7 cm from its SYS‐25 geometric center in the X direction. Stowed: Y: -.025cm, Z:-0.051cm Verification Method CAD CAD Deployed: X: 0.377cm 39 SAMPLE PAGE 40 Static FEA 41 STATIC SIM REQUIREMENTS REQ ID Requirement Verification Method Verification Document 002-StructuralAnalysis2014-04R.doc UNP 3 The SV shall be designed using the MAC curve. SolidWorks Simulations UNP 4 Factor of safety to be used are 2.0 for yield and 2.6 for ultimate for structural design and analysis. SolidWorks Simulations 002-StructuralAnalysis2014-04R.doc Other Desired Simulation Requirements: •Test in all 6 directions •Old sim uses 55g’s of acceleration •New sim uses 50g’s of acceleration •Survival of launch conditions Titan IV MAC Curve 42 SIMULATION OVERVIEW REQUIREMENTS ▪ Chassis: ▪ Simplified: suppressed some fillets, removed non-structural elements AND ▪ Materials: ▪ ▪ Aluminum 6061-T6 for most of the structure Highlighted parts, the torquer coil spools, are PEEK 43 SIMULATION OVERVIEW REQUIREMENTS AND ▪ Fixtures: ▪ ▪ One “Fixed Geometry” (blue), one “On Flat Face” (green) Allows for movement in the other two axes 44 SIMULATION OVERVIEW REQUIREMENTS AND ▪ External Loads: ▪ ▪ “Gravity” load to simulate acceleration in the chosen axis “Remote Mass” for the EPDs, which are the heaviest instrument 45 DISTRIBUTED MASSES ▪ External Loads, cont.: ▪ “Distributed Masses” for the other components: radio, panels, torquer coils, all PCBs 46 BOLT CONNECTIONS ▪ Bolts: ▪ ▪ ▪ Bolt connections were used where applicable, and in areas of interest With bolt connectors, contact sets were set to “No Penetration” Global bonding throughout the structure 47 MESH ▪ Solid Mesh: Mesh Control: ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ Element size: ~0.22 in ~0.19 in Number of elements: ~75,000 ~520,000 Degrees of freedom: ~330,000 ~2,700,000 Number of nodes: ~110,000 ~900,000 Coil element size: ~0.025 in Rail element size: ~0.035 in Reason: To have at least two elements along the edges 48 OLD SIMULATION RESULTS Simulation Results Stresses Factor of Safety Axis of Applied Acceleration Max Von Mises Stress Min Factor of Safety +X 112 MPa 2.3 -X 180 MPa 1.5 +Y 119 MPa 2.1 -Y 126 MPa 2.2 +Z 112 MPa 2.4 -Z 111 MPa 2.3 Aluminum 6061-T6 Strengths Tensile Yield Strength Ultimate Yield Strength 275 MPa 345 MPa 49 -X OLD SIM (VON MISES) -X axis 50 PROBLEMATIC AREAS Zoom of the lowest FOS, found on a cross brace in the -X axis simulation Minimum factor of safety of 1.53 51 V1 SOLUTIONS Summary of Further Simulation Results for –X external gravity load test Description Min FOS 1 Increased radius of fillet of cross braces to 0.035in 1.56 2 Increase radius of fillet of cross brace to 0.070in 1.91 3 Increase Y normal extrusion of both +X cross braces by 50 mil 1.98 - Increase Y normal extrusion of +X –Y cross brace by 50mil 4 - increase the y normal extrusion of the +X +Y cross brace by 75 mil 2.10 - increase fillet of cross braces to 0.035in *Ultimately disregarded cross brace design because of machinability 52 NEW STRUCTURE SIMULATIONS Used chassis v2 while also changing simulation parameters to 50g’s of gravity. Chassis v2 was simplified by eliminating negligible structural elements (e.g. small brackets, rail tabs). Additional bolt connectors were added for accuracy. Redefined and added contact sets to increase accuracy. 53 -X NEW SIM -X axis 54 -X NEW SIM Zoom of the lowest FOS, found on the top hat structure in the -X axis simulation 55 +Z NEW SIM 56 +Z NEW SIM Zoom of the lowest FOS, found on the tab of the bottom chassis rail in the +Z axis simulation 57 NEW STRUCTURE SIMULATIONS Simulation Results Stresses Factor of Safety Axis of Applied Acceleration Maximum Von Mises Stress Minimum Factor of Safety -X 56.7 MPa 3.29 +X 64.1 MPa 4.29 -Y 39.0 MPa 7.04 +Y 54.5 MPa 3.48 -Z 66.7 MPa 4.12 +Z 124.0 MPa 2.22 Structural Element Material Yield Strength Chassis Rails Aluminum 6061-T6 275 MPa Torquer Rails PEEK Compression Mold 89.6 MPa 58 FUTURE PLANS Rerun static sims with future revisions of the chassis 59 Modal Analysis 60 MODAL ANALYSIS OVERVIEW REQUIREMENTS AND SolidWorks Simulation 2013 Frequency Analysis UNP requirement to find the first mode of spacecraft 61 SIMULATION MODEL OVERVIEW Chassis: Simplified chassis model: removed all holes and tabs Removed all units and replaced with remote loads (stacer, EPD) and distributed masses (Avionics, Solar Panels, Torquer Coils, MAG Board) Materials: Chassis and top hats made of Aluminum 6061-T6 62 SIMULATION MODEL FIXTURES Fixed geometry on 1 face (blue), roller/slider on 1 face (green) to allow for freedom in movement in 2 axes to represent movement in P-POD 63 FIRST FIVE MODES Mass Participation Mode No. Frequency (Hz) X direction Y direction Z direction 1 168 6.63E-05 1.41E-01 3.38E-07 2 183 6.58E-05 5.93E-02 3.89E-05 3 386 9.35E-05 1.99E-05 2.20E-02 4 419 3.85E-04 4.83E-05 8.49E-02 5 510 1.04E-04 3.74E-05 2.35E-08 First Mode(168 Hz) Note: Displacement magnitudes are arbitrary. 64 OTHER Second (183Hz) Fourth (419Hz) MODE DISPLACEMENTS Third (386Hz) Fifth (510Hz) Note: Displacement magnitudes are arbitrary. 65 Vibe FEA 66 RANDOM VIBRATIONS FEA OVERVIEW AND REQUIREMENTS SolidWorks Simulation 2013 Simulate random vibrations in P-POD Testing in all 6 directions Input based on chart below from NASA Finite Element Modeling continuous Improvement (FEMCI) book and NASA General Environment Verification Speciation (GEVS) 67 ADDITIONAL FIXTURES APPLIED LOAD FOR Load being applied is the Uniform Base Excitation Additional fixtures will change location depending on the direction of the load being tested For uniform base excitations in +X direction, fixtures were placed on the -X end caps, with 3 roller/sliders (green) and 1 fixed geometry (blue) in addition to the previous fixtures 68 MESHING Solid Mesh: Mesh sizing based on rule of thumb of 2 elements per thinnest structural element and 2 elements per 90° arc 194,597 elements 328,084 nodes Element size: 0.124 inch (except where mesh controls are applied) 69 RESULTS: (+X) VON MISES STRESSES Probabilities of Non-Excedance 68.3% of cases within 95.5% of cases within 99.7% of cases within Von Mises Stress ± 0.926 MPa ± 1.852 MPa ± 2.778 MPa 70 RESULTS: DISPLACEMENTS (+X) Probabilities of Non-Excedance 68.3% of cases within 95.5% of cases within 99.7% of cases within Displacement ± 688 nm ± 1380nm ± 2060 nm 71 RESULTS IN OTHER DIRECTIONS Yield Strength: 275MPa Direction Probabilities of Non-Exceedance 68.3% of cases within 95.5% of cases within 99.7% of cases within -X Von Mises Stress ±0.543MPa ±1.09MPa ±1.63MPa Displacement ±829nm ±1,660nm ±2,490nm Von Mises Stress ±12.5MPa ±37.4MPa ±37.4MPa Displacement ±3,75nm ±7,500nm ±11,300nm Von Mises Stress ±11.5MPa ±23.1MPa ±34.6MPa Displacement ±6,430nm ±12,900nm ±19,300nm Von Mises Stress ±5.28MPa ±10.6MPa ±15.8MPa Displacement ±11,900nm ±23,800nm ±35,700nm Von Mises Stress ±0.102MPa ±.204MPa ±0.306MPa Displacement ±17.9nm ±35.8nm ±53.7nm +Y -Y +Z -Z 72 FUTURE PLANS Rerun simulations using latest iteration of chassis Run physical random vibration tests 73 Mechanisms: “Tuna Can” 74 ANTENNA HOLDER OVERVIEW REQ ID STRC‐02 Requirement Parent(s) ELFIN shall be capable of constraining all deployables SYS‐25 Verification Method I: inspection Two antennas, four elements Rolled up and secured with fishing lines, which two resistors will burn through to release them Utilizes the 3U+extra volume on the –X panel 75 TUNA CAN DESIGN AND MICD - Tuna can will be secured by 4 brass ½’’ 2-56 brass bolts with hex nuts on the bottom side - 4 holes feeding over 4 10 ohm resistors - Two of the resistors will serve as redundancy - 4 holes for antennas connections 76 MATERIAL SELECTION Delrin vs. PEEK vs. 3-D Printed Materials Mechanical/Thermal Properties Costs/Machinability UV Radiation Resistance/Outgassing Corrosion Resistance against Atomic Oxygen Name Yield Strength (MPa) Density (g/cc) Outgassing Rate (%TML) Delrin NC010 G100 73 1.42 0.34 PEEK (unfilled) 90 – 140 1.23 – 1.65 0.2 Windform XT 2.0 84 1.10 0.53 77 MATERIAL SELECTION Nylon Monofilament vs. Spectra Line Spectra Line has a smaller index of elongation Resistance to UV Light Nylon Monofilament Spectra Line (S900) Density (g/cc) 1.14 0.97 Melting Point 220 °C 147 °C Elongation (%) 25 3.9 UV Resistance Low Very High Tenacity (gpd) 6 25 78 TESTING OVERVIEW REQ ID STRC‐10 Requirement All antennas shall be capable of deploying while ELFIN is tumbling. Parent(s) SYS‐25 Verification Method Thorough testing of all deployable antennas to ensure a minimum 99.9% success rate. - Utilize arduino code with burn time of 9 seconds - Investigating the effect of variance in temperature with success of deployment - Each of the permutations listed below will be repeated 3-5 times 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Deploy at room temperature Deploy cold Long term hot deploy in hot Long term hot deploy in cold Long term cold deploy in hot Long term cold deploy cold Vacuum Vibe and deploy 79 TESTING PROCEDURE 1. Stow antennas using fishing line running over the resistor. 2. Hook up the arduino-power source to resistor. 3. Open and initialize the burn code. 4. Set voltage to 5.4V and burn time to 9 seconds. 5. Repeat in desired environmental condition Test Apparatus Deployed State 80 Mechanisms: Stacer 81 STACER OVERVIEW Stowed State • • Deployed State Custom design provided by Kaleva Engineering systems Flight heritage: Using identical stacer from ELFIN-L 82 STACER FUNCTIONALITY REQ ID Requirement Parent(s) The spacecraft shall be capable of deploying SYS‐25 STRC‐13 the stacer • • • • • Verification Method component testing Magnetometer is situated on 75cm boom Boom consists of 3 helical BeCu elements Gore cable runs from instrument to the electronic board Flywheel braking mechanism SMAR actuation mechanism 83 STACER-MICD • • +Z Stacer bracket Stacer Chute • Stacer is situated in middle U Considered a main structural element (replaces the need for the four cross braces originating on the Boeing tensor chassis design Secured to chassis through 3 Delrin brackets and four fasteners on the stacer chute 84 POWER - MECHANISMS REQ ID Requirement Parent(s) The Structures subsystem shall not exceed the power SYS‐22 STRC‐19 allocated in the ELFIN system power budget Verification Method Verification Procedure T/A: Measured power consumption data during deployment tests Power Budget PowerBudget‐##‐B.xlsx Current best estimates (CBEs) of deployment power: Supply voltages: Stacer: +9V VHF antenna: +9 V UHF antenna: +9 V Currents: 1250 mA 667 mA 667 mA Power: 11.25 W 6.0 W 6.0 W 1563 mA 834 mA 834 mA 14.1 W 7.5 W 7.5 W Margin: 25 % CBE + Margin: Stacer: VHF antenna: UHF antenna: +9V +9 V +9 V 85 Harnessing 86 HARNESSING OVERVIEW Objectives: - List and document all the cables in the spacecraft, including the following information (SYS-List_of_Cables-04) - Cable types - Connector types - Cable Routes - Pin outs - drain locations - Map out the connector locations in the avionics stack for the SBPCB1 and SBPCB 2, LETC 1 and LETC 2, and BETC 1 - Test bend radius’s of cables and make appropriate design changes if needed 87 HARNESSING SCHEMATIC 88 PRELIMINARY RESULTS Completed Tasks: -Connector locations in the avionics stack have been mapped out, except for the FPCB -Complete list of cables have been mapped out -A first attempt has been made for harnessing, focusing on the cables that cross over the stacer Design Changes from first Harnessing: -rotation of avionics unit in ZY plane -divots in sides of battery mounts leading into terminals -alteration in stacer demating process -rotation of coax connectors on He-82 Radios 89 PROBLEMS AND FUTURE TASKS Problems - Spacing issues in the Avionics Unit - Flexi-cables vs. additional mezzanines - Battery formation may needs to be altered - 14 shielded twisted pair cable from LETC 1 to SIPS and IDPU - Stacer tie downs interfering with the demating process 90 Facilities 91 IN-HOUSE FACILITIES 3D printer Used for assembly of 3D model Have access to PLA and ABS spools Proto-lab In-house machining for aluminum components, such as the chassis and the battery mounts. Thermal Vacuum Chamber Can be used to test various temperature environmental conditions for antenna deployment 92 Safety 93 SAFETY ESD All Flight Hardware Preventative Steps: ESD Training Sessions Structural Protective measures for 3D printer and machine shop: machine shop training Performance Assurance: Staff members Documents will be created by students and staff 94 Future Tasks 95 FUTURE TASKS SUMMARY Future Tasks ▪ Standardize method of stowing antennas ▪ Fully map out EMI shield ▪ Complete harnessing mock-up, documenting all cables including bend radius ▪ Conduct antenna deployment tests with thermal vacuum ▪ Complete more accurate static simulations 96 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thank you to all of our sponsors, stakeholders, and contributors Shaun Murphy @ Northrop Grumman Katharine Gamble @ UT Austin Jim White WD0E @ Colorado Satellite Services Mark Spencer WA8SME @ ARRL Tony Monteiro AA2TX & Bob Davis KF4KSS @ AMSAT-NA Mechanical Preliminary Design Review 97 Additional Slides 98 Complete Harnessing Schematic 99 AVIONICS UNIT OVERVIEW 100 BATTERY HOLDER REDESIGN Battery Mount Drawing View Battery Mount Isometric View 101