Can anyone suggest a way to repair the Kevlar section of the shock cord in my Quest Intruder? It looks slightly scorched and has also unraveled so it looks like 3 separate threads instead of a single Kevlar string.
What *do* you do to repair parts of recovery systems that are mounted deep within the bowels of a rocket? The only thing I can think of doing is to cut the BT apart just above the motor mount and then see what's what, fix it if I can, and then couple the pieces back together.
It just now occurred to me that a way to make this a more repairable system would be to eject not just the nosecone, but the entire body forward of the motor mount. Then after every flight, you'd be able to look at the condition of the shock cord that's nearest the motor and that's most likely to be damaged by the ejection charge.
Does this make sense?
Now, how many questions have I asked, and how many can you answer?

What *do* you do to repair parts of recovery systems that are mounted deep within the bowels of a rocket? The only thing I can think of doing is to cut the BT apart just above the motor mount and then see what's what, fix it if I can, and then couple the pieces back together.
It just now occurred to me that a way to make this a more repairable system would be to eject not just the nosecone, but the entire body forward of the motor mount. Then after every flight, you'd be able to look at the condition of the shock cord that's nearest the motor and that's most likely to be damaged by the ejection charge.
Does this make sense?
Now, how many questions have I asked, and how many can you answer?