Camp EvansandSatellite development |
Thanks to Mr. Howard Camp for donating most of these photos and a copy a booklet describing the environmental test facilities.. |
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Gradually, this complex work would be transferred to NASA by the late 1960's.
This page focuses on the special equipment located at Camp Evans used to test early satellite designs to make sure they would operate in the vacuum of space. Materials that worked reliably on earth would often fail up there. For example certain rubber components or plastics used in electronic equipment have gasses disolved in them. At sea-level the air-pressure would keep the gasses inplace. In the vacuum of space the gasses would boil-off causing the gasket or insullator to fail. Another example is some electronic components would over-heat and fail without air to cool them. In space there in no cooling air.
In these special chambers satellite designs and satellite components were tested to see how they would work or fail of sent into space. Many a componet or design may have gone back to the drawing board after a test in these chambers.
This chamber simulated the conditions of space up to 500,000 feet.
A description of the Thermal Vacuum Chamber in building 9088
Click here on on image for a larger view
Two views of pumps and equipment Thermal Vacuum
Chamber in building 9088

Click on either image for a better view
Early satellites in the Thermal Vacuum Chamber
being setup for a test.
1959
1961
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In the History of Communications - Camp Evans is a unique place...
As the Belmar Marconi Wireless
high-power station,Camp Evans played a roll in the opening of the modern
radio with the Edwin Armstrong regenerative circuit
test
in 1914, then during WWI a major advance in communication science was made
here in static elimination by Roy Weagant,
major advances were made here during WWII in radar, in 1946 using modified
FM radar equipment designed by Edwin Armstrong the space age was opened
with Project Diana.
Camp Evans was an important satellite
tracking center. The Army played a major roll in the development
of technology to receive cloud cover photos from a satellite orbiting above
the ionosphere. The signals from TIROS I and II
were
received here.
From the early days of wireless, to
radio, to radar, to TV, to space communications and satellites Camp Evans
played a part.
Space research we have evidence Camp Evans played a roll...
Satellite design proposal
Project 'Lunchbox'
Satellite tracking
Astro-observatory
Mini-track system
Satellite power supplies
Employing solar cells in space
Space batteries using a radioactive source
Satellite Design testing
Page updated February 1, 2004
Page created February 1, 2004
