Results 1 to 5 of 5

Thread: EO3S Egg on 3 Sporks(Spoons)

  1. #1
    Join Date
    9th February 2010
    Location
    Southern N.H.
    Posts
    3,502

    EO3S Egg on 3 Sporks(Spoons)

    EO3S Egg on 3 Sporks(Spoons)

    I saw this in Sport Rocketry March/April 2007 by Brian Nessing.
    Intrigued, I built one last spring, 2010. I never got a pic of it but I flew it until the spoons broke and I could not fix it. I loved it. It did not fly very high, 60-80 feet at most using an "A", "B", "C" motor. It didn't make sense until I figured out that it spun faster on the higher power motor which prevented it from gaining too much altitude. I used the lowest eject time so the motor popped out, making it lighter. It would spin down, slowing the decent. It doesn't require wadding, parachute or streamer.
    I need to find a stronger spoon for my next EO3S.
    Build one and have some fun.

    Daniel
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

Name:	EO3S 001.JPG 
Views:	64 
Size:	105.6 KB 
ID:	52108  

  2. #2
    Join Date
    4th March 2011
    Location
    Coachella Valley, California
    Posts
    562
    Quote Originally Posted by dlazarus6660 View Post
    EO3S Egg on 3 Sporks(Spoons)

    I saw this in Sport Rocketry March/April 2007 by Brian Nessing.
    Intrigued, I built one last spring, 2010. I never got a pic of it but I flew it until the spoons broke and I could not fix it. I loved it. It did not fly very high, 60-80 feet at most using an "A", "B", "C" motor. It didn't make sense until I figured out that it spun faster on the higher power motor which prevented it from gaining too much altitude. I used the lowest eject time so the motor popped out, making it lighter. It would spin down, slowing the decent. It doesn't require wadding, parachute or streamer.
    I need to find a stronger spoon for my next EO3S.
    Build one and have some fun.

    Daniel
    Not a single comment was left? A travesty!

    I think you left so many open questions, that guys just shook their heads, looked at the reply button, said "nah", and went to the next thread.

    First, is that an egg, or is that a nose cone from a kit? Second, do the spoons keep it on a straight trajectory? How is the motor secured? How'd you secure the spoons? What angle?

    Maybe you could try aluminum camping spoons? Light yet durable.
    Fair winds, soft landings, and total victory! -

  3. #3
    Join Date
    4th March 2011
    Location
    Coachella Valley, California
    Posts
    562
    Oh yeah, and you could epoxy some lead shot in the top of the cone for weight.
    Fair winds, soft landings, and total victory! -

  4. #4
    Join Date
    27th August 2011
    Posts
    857

    Here something along the same line

    http://forums.rocketshoppe.com/attac...chmentid=26076

    I call it the Tiger's Claw Sporket

  5. #5
    Join Date
    9th February 2010
    Location
    Southern N.H.
    Posts
    3,502

    Sorry Jeff

    Quote Originally Posted by jeffgeraci View Post
    Not a single comment was left? A travesty!

    I think you left so many open questions, that guys just shook their heads, looked at the reply button, said "nah", and went to the next thread.

    First, is that an egg, or is that a nose cone from a kit? Second, do the spoons keep it on a straight trajectory? How is the motor secured? How'd you secure the spoons? What angle?

    Maybe you could try aluminum camping spoons? Light yet durable.
    Sorry Jeff, I forgot about this posting.

    1. The egg is an plastic Easter Egg that had candy in it. You can buy them in craft and/or dollar stores.
    2. The spoons keep it on a pretty straight trajectory. If they are canted in any way, it will spin, which is what you want it to do.
    3. Motor is friction fit, but loosely, you want it to eject out to allow the rocket to spin down slower with less weight on board.
    4. The spoons are glued on with Super Glue(med). Use Accelerator.
    I sanded the end of the spoon handle semi-round to better fit the round contour of the motor tube.
    5. Angle is about 45 degrees.
    6. Yes, you need to epoxy some lead weight to the top of the motor tube. As much as you can fit!

    PM me your e-mail and I'll send you the scan of the article.

    Daniel
    Last edited by dlazarus6660; 7th September 2011 at 03:50 PM.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •