It was actually Voyager 2. It did not stop, but just flew past Uranus. The year was 1986.
the other 1 does stop working NO it does not
Almost nothing, weight is a force exerted due to gravity and since Voyager 1 is well outside the solar system there will be almost no gravitational force acting upon it.
Voyager 1 was launched on the 5th of September 1977 and Voyager 2 was launched before voyager 1 on the 20th of August 1977.
There are two Voyager spacecraft. Voyager 2 was launched on August 20 1977. Voyager 1, despite its no.1 ranking, was launched second on September 5 1977.
Voyager 1, Voyager 2 and Cassini.
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2.
19th December 1977.
Early in their travels, the Voyager probes sent back loads of pictures, atmospheric data, and trajectory information and magnetic data. Probably the only usable data these days is from the low energy charged particle detector in Voyager 1 which, after some gyroscope rolls, is known to have slowed to zero suggesting it has left the heliosphere. And Voyager 2's plasma detection experiment (this is no longer working on Voyager 1) which is giving us insight into the heliosheath.
Voyager 1 arrived in November 1980 and Voyager 2 in August 1981.
Jupiter voyager 1 used jupiters gravity to send it on to Saturn. voyager 2 went to Saturn uranus and neptune
Voyager 1 never visited Neptune. Voyager 2 has. Voyager 2 is currently the only scientific instrument to do a fly-by of Neptune.