The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
Re: The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
Altough I've already opened new threads with several findings amongst NASA documents, related to the use of the 6502 microprocessor based systems, I will also tell here that the Apple II, the AIM 65, the Jolt / SuperJolt and KIM-1 systems were extensively used in NASA projects, or external projects in univerisities backed by NASA. It could be said that it was the microprocessor of choice in NASA in the '80s.
Re: The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
Interesting to hear. I'll post some thoughts on those threads of yours - thanks for starting them. Just one request: could you put NASA in the title (which is to say, the subject line of the head post) to make it easier to find?
Edit: for convenience Edit: updated those titles - thanks!
Edit: for convenience Edit: updated those titles - thanks!
Last edited by BigEd on Fri Jun 10, 2022 8:52 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
BigEd wrote:
Interesting to hear. I'll post some thoughts on those threads of yours - thanks for starting them. Just one request: could you put NASA in the title (which is to say, the subject line of the head post) to make it easier to find?
Edit: for convenience
Edit: for convenience
- Sheep64
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Re: The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
Quote:
All EVA batteries will be converted to Lithium technology by 2016 and the existing BCM is not capable of charging them, has numerous fault issues and will be expiring in 2016.
With lithium chargers, they typically seem to stop short of a full charge on alternate cycles. I presume this is to reduce a lithium memory effect. With nickel cadmium, the memory effect occurred around the 40% level. This could create a succession of false bottoms until a battery was unless. With lithium, I presume a memory effect occurs near the top. That would prevent a good old, lead acid style, linear regulator hooked to the mains, over-night trickle charge. Regardless, 6502 charging in potential fatal environment would be heavily logged and analyzed.
I am surprised that NASA would not make modification to a system which is mostly tested. From They Write The Right Stuff, a highly productive NASA programmer writes four lines of software per year and when they find an error, they attempt to eliminate the whole class of errors. Furthermore, this is NASA which first isolated a (lead free) tin whisker on a Toyota accelerator pedal. If necessary, they'd slice and dissect a questionable battery.
Is it correct that, in 2016, NASA, who were mad about 6502/Am9511 FPU systems, dumped a reliable, stateful, 6502 battery charging system because it didn't stop short on alternate charge cycles? After exploding lithium batteries in laptops, exploding lithium batteries in phones, an almost fatal incident in a Boeing 787, exploding lithium batteries in scooters, exploding lithium batteries in cars (not including the Tesla which caught fire three times), NASA said "Yeah, we want some of that. We haven't had any exploding astronauts, lately."
Re: The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
Sheep64 wrote:
Is it correct that, in 2016, NASA, who were mad about 6502/Am9511 FPU systems, dumped a reliable, stateful, 6502 battery charging system because it didn't stop short on alternate charge cycles?
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Re: The Space Shuttle used 6502S OH YEAH!!!
Sheep64 wrote:
Quote:
All EVA batteries will be converted to Lithium technology by 2016 and the existing BCM is not capable of charging them, has numerous fault issues and will be expiring in 2016.
With lithium chargers, they typically seem to stop short of a full charge on alternate cycles. I presume this is to reduce a lithium memory effect. With nickel cadmium, the memory effect occurred around the 40% level. This could create a succession of false bottoms until a battery was unless. With lithium, I presume a memory effect occurs near the top. That would prevent a good old, lead acid style, linear regulator hooked to the mains, over-night trickle charge. Regardless, 6502 charging in potential fatal environment would be heavily logged and analyzed.
I am surprised that NASA would not make modification to a system which is mostly tested. From They Write The Right Stuff, a highly productive NASA programmer writes four lines of software per year and when they find an error, they attempt to eliminate the whole class of errors. Furthermore, this is NASA which first isolated a (lead free) tin whisker on a Toyota accelerator pedal. If necessary, they'd slice and dissect a questionable battery.
Is it correct that, in 2016, NASA, who were mad about 6502/Am9511 FPU systems, dumped a reliable, stateful, 6502 battery charging system because it didn't stop short on alternate charge cycles? After exploding lithium batteries in laptops, exploding lithium batteries in phones, an almost fatal incident in a Boeing 787, exploding lithium batteries in scooters, exploding lithium batteries in cars (not including the Tesla which caught fire three times), NASA said "Yeah, we want some of that. We haven't had any exploding astronauts, lately."
They do not suffer from memory effects, however hydrogen gasses develop inside the batteries which typically exit through a valve - the closer to maximum capacity the cell is charged the more gasses develop. This is why modern laptops typically cycle between 97% and 100% capacity to reduce the time at 100%. And why Apple has implemented the “only charge beyond 80% if you usually need it mode”.
Optimal charge state for a Li-ion cell is 40-60% capacity - which you might have noticed if you turned on a new phone without charging it first, as they are typically charged to that level for storage.
A cell discharged below ~2.5 volts will also start to develop dendrites in the electrolyte, potentially causing a short circuit during recharge and explosion - which is why you should never recharge a deeply discharged cell.
TL;DR
Lithium batteries need a dedicated charging circuit and a dedicated battery protection circuit from over and undervoltage.
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New new new new new video out! Serial Bootloader for my 65uino
Also, check out: I2C on a 6502 Single Board Computer
and Complete hardware overview of my 6502 SBC R1
New new new new new video out! Serial Bootloader for my 65uino
Also, check out: I2C on a 6502 Single Board Computer
and Complete hardware overview of my 6502 SBC R1