Claims
- 1. A highly maneuverable and fully collapsible tetrahedral beam comprised of a plurality of interconnected tetrahedral, each tetrahedron including:
- (a) five fixed length battens;
- (b) joint means joining said battens into batten frames to form two equilateral triangles and providing two rotational degrees of freedom at each joint;
- (c) two batten frames sharing a common base batten; and
- (d) a longeron connecting each of the apexes of said batten frames, said longeron including a foldable hinge at its mid-point and being pivotally hinged at its ends to said joint means.
- 2. A fully collapsible tetrahedral beam as in claim 1 including means for independently inducing movement of said joint means relative to other joints in said tetrahedral beam.
- 3. A fully collapsible tetrahedral beam as in claim 1 wherein said joint means includes:
- (a) a first gusset maintaining two battens in a fixed 60.degree. relationship and pivotably hinging a longeron located as to bisect said 60.degree. angle;
- (b) a second gusset maintaining two battens in a fixed 60.degree. relationship and pivotably hinging a longeron located as to bisect said 60.degree. angle; and
- (c) a link pivotably connecting said first gusset and said second gusset to form a joint assembly such that said upper gusset and said lower gusset pivot to provide two degrees of rotational freedom at each joint assembly whereby, said joint assembly can be folded or actuated independently of and in any sequence relative to other joints of the tetrahedral beam permitting the tetrahedral beam to deploy to any desired position.
- 4. A fully collapsible tetrahedral beam as in claim 1 wherein said foldable hinge is electrically powered.
- 5. A fully collapsible tetrahedral beam as in claim 1 wherein said longeron contains telescoping segments.
- 6. A fully collapsible tetrahedral beam as in claim 4 including power means for inducing telescoping movement of said telescoping segments, said power means being selected from hydraulic, pneumatic and electrical power means.
ORIGIN OF THE INVENTION
The invention described herein was made in the performance of work under a NASA contract and is subject to the provisions of Section 305 of the National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958, Public Law 85-568 (72 Stat. 435; 42 USC 2457).
US Referenced Citations (15)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
848670 |
Aug 1970 |
CAX |