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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Friday, May 16, 2025

NASA has revived a set of thrusters on the nearly 50-year-old Voyager 1 spacecraft after declaring them inoperable over two decades ago. It's a nice long-distance engineering win for the team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, responsible for keeping the venerable Voyager spacecraft flying - and a critical one at that, as clogging fuel lines threatened to derail the backup thrusters currently in use. The things you have to deal with when your spacecraft is operating more than four decades beyond its original mission plan, eh? Voyager 1 launched in 1977.

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... JPL reported Wednesday that the maneuver, completed in March, restarted Voyager 1's primary roll thrusters, which are used to keep the spacecraft aligned with a tracking star. That guide star helps keep its high-gain antenna aimed at Earth, now over 15.6 billion miles (25 billion kilometers) away, and far beyond the reach of any telescope.

Those primary roll thrusters stopped working in 2004 after a pair of internal heaters lost power. Voyager engineers long believed they were broken and unfixable. The backup roll thrusters in use are now at risk due to residue buildup in their fuel lines, which could cause failure as early as this fall.

Without roll thrusters, Voyager 1 would lose its ability to stay properly oriented and eventually drift out of contact. To make matters worse, the only antenna on Earth with enough power to send commands to the Voyager probes -- the 230 foot (70 meter) wide DSS-43 dish in Australia -- is undergoing an upgrade shutdown until next February, with only a couple of brief operational windows in August and December.

While other dishes around the world can still receive data from the Voyagers, those windows are the only opportunities to send commands to the spacecraft, which remain the most distant human-made objects in existence. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-05-16 08:44 PM | Reply

JPL - up the road from me. If you ever get an opportunity, do a tour

#2 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-05-17 03:50 AM | Reply

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