Show HN: FPGA soft-core of the Saab Viggen's 1963 airborne computer

21 points
1/21/1970
2 days ago
by FormerLabFred

Comments


FormerLabFred

Some background reading:

https://www.saab.com/newsroom/stories/2017/december/datasaab...

PDF:

http://www.datasaab.se/Papers/Articles/Viggenck37.pdf

Now we got it on a %50-100 FPGA board.

Half the size of a credit card. I guess the original computer onboard was 12-15 kgs

2 days ago

djmips

Maybe this video. (I haven't watched the entire video yet) https://youtu.be/zf6bZBV7EWo

a day ago

FormerLabFred

Late in Sweden, back tomorrow (CET)

2 days ago

jacquesm

What a great project. I wonder how the modern sensors stack up against the military version in times of jitter and drift, that might cause some surprises. Larger sensors have a lot of inertial filtering compared to smaller ones.

I also think that the MTBF target the original had will be vastly exceeded by this replica due to the reduction in component count, but it will probably be more susceptible to bitflips. But you won't be flying that high if you put this on a drone. Please post future updates.

2 days ago

FormerLabFred

Great points!

This is experimental,

We need to address MEMS vs mechanical gyro noise profile

Gain constants in the nav kernel were tuned empirically for the original sensor suite.

Then we got SEU yes :)

noted, though flying at 30m AGL as the Viggen did in low-level attack mode keeps the cosmic ray exposure manageable

Will write a handover doc for Saab, they can do the rest of the dev :)

Yes will post updates

(we run two other drone projects, uas-phone-swarm for iOS and Android

There is a public blog post on it. Patreon/Formerlab

Modern smartphones more powerful than the ck37 tech)

2 days ago

FormerLabFred

Flying smarthphones project introduced here:

https://www.patreon.com/posts/152446275

Public access

a day ago

jacquesm

You are doing something really interesting here in terms of discovering scaling of such algorithms with respect to vehicle size and sensor response, I'm super interested in what else you will discover. I'm also not aware of anybody doing something similar in the past.

a day ago

FormerLabFred

We had to rewrite the main system so those who are not into code and tech much could run it more easily. They are used to MarineTraffic and VesselFinder web sites.

This is tailor made for them, check loitering, export CSV.

Main system is no secret, but it got loads of ML and frontend is a bit messy. But one day we will ship it too.

If you check the link to GUR War and Sanctions web site in the README, they got a map where they plot harbors and similar. The main Shadow Fleet Tracker does next port prediction and handles flag change. We’ll sort mire user-friendly frontend and onboarding for the main version in future. Then people can use it as they need.

Thanks for all the feedback folks! Will try to reply a few times a day here. And post some more blog articles.

a day ago