Level One Success

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This Saturday I had a successful launch for my NAR Level 1 cert.

I wanted to take a moment to thank everyone here on the forum who offered advice and answered my questions over the last few months. I've really learned a lot since I re-discovered the hobby, and look forward to the many more exciting things to come.

The Details:

I flew a 2.6" Madcow DX3 on a single-use AT H135W.

My first flight of the morning was not a success: the ejection charge went off almost immediately after (possibly during) the burn. It tore the nomex blanket clean off the kevlar shock cord and thrashed the chute - it held on by a single shroud line. Rocket fell from 1800 feet to the dry lake bed without any other damage. The helpful cub director (thanks Gregg!) who observed me drill the delay, prep my rocket and witness the launch suspected motor malfunction.

It's not the first brush with mortal peril this rocket has had. On its maiden launch a few months ago, the wind was a bit "aggressive" and dragged it over a half mile across the lakebed. If not for the scrub on the other side of the highway, it would have kept on going. Needless to say, this is one tough bird. 99% wood glue too. Rocket earned its name that day: "Road Rash".

So after scraping off some (but not all) of the lakebed dirt, I put on another nomex, packed it full of dog barf for good measure, attached a new chute, and with a fresh motor was back on the pad within in an hour. 3090', good deployment, and other than a bit of a hike to pick it up, I had my papers signed and was in the high power club.

Next up: going for my 5280 stripe in the LOC Vulcanite I recently completed. (I had contemplated flying this one for my L1 but felt like good 'ol Rash deserved the shot).

IMG_5740.jpg


Edit: here are the actual stats from the flight from my JL Altimeter 3. Interesting fact: my Open Rocket sim said the optimal delay was 10.9 seconds. I drilled it to 12. According to this, it ejected at exactly 10 seconds - .6 seconds too soon. So OR was almost right on the money with the sim. Also proves what I have been told that delay times have a tolerance of +/- 2 seconds...

Max altitude 3091 ft
Date 9/9/2017 11:11 AM
Mode Rocket
Duration 2 mins 17 secs
Notes H135 W Level 1 cert flight
Thrust time 1.75 secs
Max speed 445 mph
Peak accel 16.00 Gs
Avg accel 11.56 Gs
Ejection delay 10.00 secs
Coast-Apogee 10.60 secs
Apogee-Eject -0.60 secs
Ejection altitude 3062 ft
Initial descent 25 fps
Landing speed 25 fps

FlightGraph.png
 
congrats - it is a long and slippery slope that you have in front of you... take your time going through the stages and dont rush things... rushing rocketry is BAD..
 
Congratulations on the L1 achievement .

What kind of motor are you looking to fly next ?

Kenny
 
Congratulations on the L1 achievement .

What kind of motor are you looking to fly next ?

Kenny

Thanks! For the LOC Vulcanite, I'm very excited to try a AT I280DM sims to just under 6k feet and right around mach. I'm planning on sticking to DMS motors for just a little while longer while I learn about reloadable motors. (I try to stick to one new concept at a time). I have a TeleGPS I've been fiddling with. Tracking will be my next big concept to master.
 
congrats, sound like you built it pretty sturdy, nice to be able to change out the chute/nomex and get right back to the business at hand.
 
This Saturday I had a successful launch for my NAR Level 1 cert.

I wanted to take a moment to thank everyone here on the forum who offered advice and answered my questions over the last few months. I've really learned a lot since I re-discovered the hobby, and look forward to the many more exciting things to come.

The Details:

I flew a 2.6" Madcow DX3 on a single-use AT135W.

My first flight of the morning was not a success: the ejection charge went off almost immediately after (possibly during) the burn. It tore the nomex blanket clean off the kevlar shock cord and thrashed the chute - it held on by a single shroud line. Rocket fell from 1800 feet to the dry lake bed without any other damage. The helpful cub director (thanks Gregg!) who observed me drill the delay, prep my rocket and witness the launch suspected motor malfunction.

It's not the first brush with mortal peril this rocket has had. On its maiden launch a few months ago, the wind was a bit "aggressive" and dragged it over a half mile across the lakebed. If not for the scrub on the other side of the highway, it would have kept on going. Needless to say, this is one tough bird. 99% wood glue too. Rocket earned its name that day: "Road Rash".

So after scraping off some (but not all) of the lakebed dirt, I put on another nomex, packed it full of dog barf for good measure, attached a new chute, and with a fresh motor was back on the pad within in an hour. 3090', good deployment, and other than a bit of a hike to pick it up, I had my papers signed and was in the high power club.

Next up: going for my 5280 stripe in the LOC Vulcanite I recently completed. (I had contemplated flying this one for my L1 but felt like good 'ol Rash deserved the shot).

View attachment 327822

Congratulations; way to persevere!
 
Thanks! For the LOC Vulcanite, I'm very excited to try a AT I280DM sims to just under 6k feet and right around mach. I'm planning on sticking to DMS motors for just a little while longer while I learn about reloadable motors. (I try to stick to one new concept at a time). I have a TeleGPS I've been fiddling with. Tracking will be my next big concept to master.

That will be a serious flight !

Good luck with the tracking and dual deploy electronics ..you will want that flight to drop before the main comes out .

Kenny
 
Thanks! For the LOC Vulcanite, I'm very excited to try a AT I280DM sims to just under 6k feet and right around mach. I'm planning on sticking to DMS motors for just a little while longer while I learn about reloadable motors. (I try to stick to one new concept at a time). I have a TeleGPS I've been fiddling with. Tracking will be my next big concept to master.

Congrats. Also, be careful, because once you get comfortable with tracking all kinds of insane ideas become doable.
 
Way to stick with it, congrats!!


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