
Originally Posted by
renisnceman
I flew a large rocket yesterday on a K1275, and the NC and 10' main ejected at the same time as the booster and drogue. The technical detais are as follows. Dual deploy with redundant electronics (2 Adept 22's). Rocket height is 102" and weighed 38 lbs with motor. Booster had 48" drogue and 35' of tubular nylon. Used 2-56 shear pins. Nose cone was attached to a D-bag and came down under its own chute. NC also had 3 2-56 shear pins. Ground tested ejection charges (2 gms for drogue in 8"x8" payload bay, 3.5 gms main in 8" x 13" main payload bay). 10' main was attached to payload bay with 30' tubular nylon. We heard both the main and main back up charges fire at 1200' and 900' respectively-but this was after the main already ejected. Checked the wiring on both altimeters-nothing wrong there. One seasoned flyer suggested I should use a longer shock cord on the drogue and 4-40 shear pins on the NC instead of 2-56. Also, both of the Adepts beeped out similar altitudes. Thankfully it didn't drift far, but I'd like to get this worked out before I fly a bigger motor.
If you flew at ROC I saw the flite and it looked as if it was a pressure separation. I believe the LCO even made a comment to the effect. Remember-your chute can plug that relief hole and make it worthless. Other than that- Nice flite on a good looking bird!
TRA 2383
I'd like to have a smart phone, but I don't qualify.
I'm not user friendly, I have Anti-Social Security.
I don't always do things, but when I do, I think I'm busy
I'm usually left holding the bag. If I got a Right bag, maybe it would be better.
Why is it a launch lug? They are usually too small to carry your rocket to the pad with.
Why do I need an altimeter that talks back to me? I can get that at home.