R1

R1 and Alice’s Estes Zinger.

After having it built for a month, we finally flew R1, the first rocket I’ve designed in ~30 years. I had put this together overnight as a backup rocket in case something happened to Alice’s Estes Zinger at her first launch, but we did not wind up flying R1 then. Yesterday’s PARA520 launch presented an opportunity though and it had a great debut flight, sailing straight up and then… drifting into an intensely muddy but fortunately empty cow pen. Ok, that last part could have been better, but at least the clean paint job did not get particularly dirty.

R1 modeling in OpenRocket.

R1 is a very basic rocket largely made out of parts from an old Estes Designer’s Special box. Although no doubt overkill for such a straightforward rocket, it was modeled in OpenRocket in order to adjust the sizing and hit a good stability caliber. It has a balsa nose cone, BT20 tube, and four trapezoidal fins. These were cut by hand from 1/6″ balsa but I made a mistake and oriented the grain weakly, which I only realized when they snapped in transport. So I cut sticker paper for both sides of each fin and glued the leading edges, so now they look sharp and are very strong. Recovery system is a small parachute and it launches on 1/8″ rod. The finish is simple spray painting that was literally still drying in the car on the way to our January launch… The purple body came out particularly rich and smooth though despite the hasty work.

On the launchpad at PARA, March 7.

On the launchpad w/ Alice’s orange starter rocket.

In the end I’m very pleased with this simple rocket. Clean looks, strong, flew well. Can’t ask for much more for a last minute, late night scratchbuild.

SS Enterprise

Continuing our current rocket kick, this past weekend my daughter and I were planning on attending our first organized model rocket launch (with PARA520). The weather however scrubbed that event. So instead we capitalized on a day indoors waiting out intermittent sleet and then a day with solid sledding conditions with the construction and inaugural launch(es) of the Space Sled Enterprise, Alice Miranda captain. The design and construction are from scratch, caveat we downloaded a few of the graphics. It’s all scrap wood and upcycled shipping boxes, held together by heavy staples, packing tape, and Makedo corrugated cardboard screws, with some duct tape on the runners. Launch site is the public golf course down the street. The ship fits perfectly, glides fast, and tracks true. The only thing missing is a tow hook for the ground support crew to pull it back up the hill…

 

 

 

 

First Rocket Launch

A while ago my mom unearthed a box of ~30 year old model rocket stuff. Continuing Alice’s current rocket kick, this weekend we assembled one of the intact kits, she painted it, and we launched it. As a true introduction to model rocketry, we went through several sets of batteries (including Pop-Pop running home to get more) until we found a strong enough batch for the finicky/inefficient controller; multiple igniters failed to ignite (you had one job!); the wind changed while we were futzing with batteries so the rocket drifted off-field, landed in a parking lot, and broke a fin; and then we had to leave anyway so Alice could use the bathroom. All in all… a semi-successful first flight.

Much thought and planning went into the painting of the rocket.

Executing the painting assembly line.

Ready to launch!

Successful recovery.