I think you and I spelled it out in your Policies and Procedures Manual, Alan.This is an excellent opportunity to clarify a detail. It is my impression that a specific reload kit must be tested in a specific set of hardware (which might be made by the manufacturer of the reload kit - a regular or ordinary certification - or might be made by another manufacturer - a cross-certification). Cross-certifications by class or type, for example ALL CTI 38mm 4 grain I motors, regardless of propellant type, certified for use in AT 4-grain 38mm cases, never took place, nor did the manufacturers intend for such usage to happen. Is this correct?
I ask this because I have recently been doing a lot of certifications of Aerotech Super Thunder single-use and reloads. This is an unusually stout and fast-burning propellant, and as a potential flyer, I would want that specific reload to have been developed and tested for certification in the specific hardware that I planned to use to put in my rocket.
Those of you who know me know that I have not flown a commercially manufactured motor (except for some Estes B4's and C6's) since 2014, but knowing what I know, I would never try to fly the new K1800ST in anything other than an approved 75/2560 case. I want to make it clear that this is not an official Tripoli policy or recommendation, it is my personal opinion ONLY.
AW

Here's what it says:
6.5. Cross-certifications: All of the requirements for cross-certification of reloads from one manufacturer in the hardware of another manufacturer, including numbers and fees, are, in general, the same as for reloadable motors from individual manufacturers. Parties interested in cross-certifying hardware or reloads should contact TMT in advance, as numbers and fees may vary depending on circumstances and details at the discretion of the TMT Chair.
No 38 mm loads were ever cross certified (between CTI and AT) as far as I know. Neither have 54mm loads been. The only sizes that have been cross certified were 75 and 98 mm and not all of them from either manufacturer were certified in each others' cases. To put it simply, a reload must be submitted together with the case the manufacturer wishes it certified in. So, if AT or CTI wants to certify a reload in the other manufacturer's case, they must provide the necessary number of reloads as spelled out in your P&P Manual together with the correct case and with instructions that apply to that combination. In other words, a motor that is both certified and cross-certified is actually submitted at least twice, once with each case the manufacturer wants it certified for.
Last edited: