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Issue
98, September 1998
Smart
Rockets - Data Acquisition in Model Rocketry
by
Tom Consi & Jim Bales
Start
Introduction to Model
Rocketry
Rocket Science 101
Control & Data Logging The
Accelerometer
Software Power
System Construction
Launch Control Box
Results
Future Developments
Software
& Sources
POWER
The power system, consisting
of a battery and a voltage regulator, was one of the more
difficult portions of the design because it operates under
several constraints. First, the battery must source 30
mA at 3 V.
Second, the regulated 5-V
rail is critical because it is the reference for the PICs
ADC. Any change in this voltage translates into a proportional
error in the recorded acceleration.
Third, the power system must
be compact and lightweight because 50 g is the rockets
maximum payload. Finally, it must be reasonably efficient
because small batteries have limited energy.
We started by looking at
high-energy batteries. The two obvious choices were alkaline
cells and lithium primary cells. Lithium cells have, on
average, three times more energy per unit mass than alkaline
cells.
We settled on a CR2-style
lithium battery designed for high-current applications.
It provides 750 mAh at 3 V and weighs 11 g.
We selected Maxims
MAX631A step-up switching regulator because of its low
part count (one inductor and two capacitors) and small
quiescent current. The selection of the inductor is critical
because its resistance must be low (0.5 ? or less) and
it must not saturate when the current through it peaks.
The power supply is shown in Figure 2.
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