NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Celestial Simulator
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2018 Apr 1, 16:22 -0700
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2018 Apr 1, 16:22 -0700
On 2018-03-31 20:01, Phil Sadler wrote: > This does look like it sits on top of the Hound Dog missile star tracker. Sadly, it does not mate with the MD-1 star tracker that I do have. I found the second cable that I needed as well, now I just need a power supply for 175 and 280 volts 400 hz to fire it up. That's a peculiar power requirement. Some military flightline maintenance equipment does run on 400 Hz because that's the aircraft frequency. It's convenient if test equipment can plug into the same power cart that runs the plane. The B-52 even has an outlet in the ceiling of the navigator compartment. However, aircraft voltage is the ordinary household value of 120 V with respect to ground, or 208 V phase to phase. My ASB-16 bombing navigational system maintenance manual from 1980 has an illustration of a "three-star simulator" which could be installed on top of the MD-1 astrotracker. The part number is 18-0001-00583. I don't know the manufacturer. It looks far simpler than the device Phil owns. The basic shape is a cylinder, width greater than height. Two small vertical cylinders project from the top. Possibly these contain the collimators that generate the stars. (I suspect there's a third one, not visible in the illustration.) Three pillars support a triangular plate above the simulator proper. On the plate is a telescopic sight, free to move in elevation. That plate was the official basis for measuring the B-52 attitude when leveling the vertical gyro of the ASB-16. I.e., you would install the three-star simulator over the glass dome of the MD-1, then put a precision clinometer on the plate to measure the aircraft pitch and roll to 1 minute. The mount of the vertical gyro was adjusted so its electrical outputs matched the aircraft attitude. Pitch and roll could also be measured at a plumb bob target in one of the wheel wells, but the book says the three-star simulator is the preferred method. The telescope provided a precise aircraft centerline for aligning the antennas of the bombing and Doppler radars. This required a target stand accurately positioned in front of the plane. A guy on top of the B-52 looked through the scope and talked the stand operator into position. I have never seen the three-star simulator in the flesh. Most of my duties were in the shop, and when I did work the flightline, a job never came up that required the simulator. It didn't belong to the bomb-nav shop anyway. If needed it was borrowed from the people who maintained the MD-1, who I think were the instrument / autopilot shop. Not sure — this was 35 years ago!