
LM's Jordin Kare and Dryden's John Piatt discussing photovoltaics and reflections

Lightweight mechanical design is as important as efficient electrical design (courtesy LM)

LM's crew handling their climber

LM, now in Red!
LaserMotive is one of the Dilas teams, and since they own their power beaming laser, they have opted to conduct most of their tests at their own facility. This means we only have to conduct a minimum set of tests with them at Dryden - a climber evaluation test in which we poke and prod the climber looking for any mechanical suspect points, and a climber low power reflection test, which tells us what sort of reflection pattern the climber generates.
Any reflections that are not downwards pointing (within 15-degrees of vertical, actually) are considered potentially hazardous, and so have to be characterized. Using the low power test, we found none, but we’ll look for more during the high-power tests at their facility.
The climber also appears both light-weight and robust, and it appears that there is no risk of it coming off the cable and tilting – something we specifically look for as a potential failure mode.
LaserMotive brought a low-power 808 nm laser for the reflection testing, and are letting McGill University use it for their reflection testing as well (McGill is also an 808 nm team).
This level of sportsmanship is mandatory as far as I’m concerned… The teams are fiercely competitive, and jealous about their secrets, but nobody wants to win on a technicality, and resource sharing is common all around - there’s a real spirit of “may the best team win”, which makes it all worth while. This is a science and technology challenge, not Survivor… (That said, when the competition is in full force and people are under stress, some sparks might still fly…)
Back to lasermotive though, looking at their climber, it is obvious how much thought went into efficiency – a Space Elevator climber has to be efficient at converting the laser into electricity, efficient at using the electricity to power itself, and lightweight.
This year, there is no minimum weight requirement, and the teams indeed produced some very weight-efficient design. I should probably look at weight comparisons between last year’s climbers this year’s batch – I’d guess they now weigh about 10-20% of what they used to.
We will only see LM’s beam source in about 2 weeks, so I’ll have more pictures then.
LaserMotive are:
- Jordin Kare
- Tom Nugent
- Carsten Erickson
- Don Moore
- Bryan Tillotson
- Steve Beland
- Nick Bratt
- Steve Burrows
- Brent Davis
- Joe Grez
- Mary Kay Kare
- Jeff Alexander
- Stuart Allman
- Michael Brannan
- Dave Bashford
- Bill Boyde
- Nick Burrows
- David Truax