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I have not done the math, but "not too bad" is gonna mean higher than people think.

Looks like a "devil is in the details" effort.

I like it, don't get me wrong here.

Will be one to watch!



It's "not too bad" in the sense that lots of electronics (e.g. phones) can already withstand the high accelerations - they have to otherwise they'd break every time you dropped them. It's still very high acceleration though.


There is a lot more to this than electronics.


Sure.


I just had a thought. This tech seems like "space junk" type tech. It won't launch high mass items.

But it can launch a lot of low mass ones, right?

If moderate to high decay orbits are selected as targets, maybe it ends up being less overall space junk. Launch a lot, and as the items fall back, replenish them as needed.

And maybe there are ways to package. Imagine a chemically active packing. Like spray foam, only with some sort of trigger.

Once the ship, satellite, item (not sure what to call low mass things) has been launched, Abbas release is triggered that essentially vaporizes the packing material.

A day or so after arrival in the target orbit, maybe hours and who knows there. I have no idea how chemistry might work in this application....

After arrival, the packing vaporizes away, leaving the rest to do whatever it is supposed to do during the course of it's service life. Being small, the burn on reentry is likely going to break it all down into the basic elements, circle of life style.

Thinking about it this way jas me intrigued.




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