Good stuff! I really like the transition to fiberglass.
And almost all of it stolen from guys like you Tony!Next level **** going on here!
Tony
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm reading that as your sustainer fins are 0.1 inch thick G10. Given your sustainer is simulated to hit ~Mach 3.6ish I'd be concerned about those fins not being thick or stiff enough for that flight profile.
- 4 fins, > 2 calibers of stability through flight profile per Rasaero, 0.1 in G10 with no tip-to-tip
Nice! Any documentation or pictures I can take a look at (read: steal from)?Very cool thread, I'm actually building a staging stack quite similar to this at the moment. One question though.
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm reading that as your sustainer fins are 0.1 inch thick G10. Given your sustainer is simulated to hit ~Mach 3.6ish I'd be concerned about those fins not being thick or stiff enough for that flight profile.
And while in general I agree that t2t isn't necessary for the up bit (assuming your fins are adequate thickness with fillets to match) I'm applying it to everything aggressive moving forward as most of my fins are swept back and the risk of popping one on landing is high.
Nice! Any documentation or pictures I can take a look at (read: steal from)?
No worries Rob! Same to you, I'll be following your thread closely.@plugger - Thanks for the pictures, that's excellent, keep us updated and have fun! You have me going back and checking my sims again now... I'm only ~10% more impulse on both the booster and sustainer motors than you.
This is a 30 year old picture. 1990 tech, simple timers.
Timer assembly retained by a 0.06” disc of G10, not seen here. Disc is trapped between snap ring and nozzle washer. Motor was not sealed but throat area reduced by half.
Electronics are destroyed at ignition.
if a sealed burst disc of an mass is used the pressure goes up high and fast. A static test to determine failure pressure is pretty much useless.
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You can still use HEI and not have to take the motor apart at the pad by leaving the rear closure unattached before assembling the full stack on the pad. At least that's what I'm planning to do.
Absolutely a valid way to do things. I'm still making friends with two stagers though, and as a hobbyist doing this once or twice a year, am pretty sold on @JimJarvis50 's preference to do a full up electronics test immediately before an igniter goes into a motor. May or may not stick with this method, but I have a ways to go to be comfortable enough around multi stagers to go that route. To a lesser extent, I would also prefer to not be messing with closures at the pad - I'm sure I'm going to have enough to worry about at T-20 minutes on these early flights.You can still use HEI and not have to take the motor apart at the pad by leaving the rear closure unattached before assembling the full stack on the pad. At least that's what I'm planning to do.
You do realize that Bob is a really bad influence.....(franken) Tower:
A good friend and rocketry mentor insists on flying out of towers. For everything; Estes, sport flights, min diameter, everything. After 15 or 20 years of that kind of indoctrination, I'm drinking the kool-aid as well.
The couple catches for this project are that 1) this is four fins, everything I had was set up for three and 2) I wanted something a bit longer in an attempt to keep things straight off the pad.
My starting point was my tower below. Three basic components, a base, rails and triangle. I've flown D's to N's out of this.
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I started out with a bunch of stuff ordered online, mostly brackets and rails from McMaster. I've slowing been drilling and tapping a ton of holes the last few weeks.
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Tower base:
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With mounts for rails. One unintended (but very appreciated) result of holding onto the rails this way is that I've found if a motor catos, the rails just slide out of the base rather than bending.
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I converted my top triangle to a square (it can now be used in either configuration - that's what the unused brackets are still doing there) and built an additional one to support things midway:
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All 14 feet - I'm stacking my original 8 ft rails on top of new 6 ft rails. In the future I'll probably keep the top square ~2-3ft below the ends of the rails. I also need to either move my stakes out of get a second set for the top square ropes. I figured I'd stick a rocket in it too while I was working on things...
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The full up test revealed one oversight - the only thing holding the rails to the small angles at the base are 1/4-20 rods running axially into the rails. This works fine with the single triangle, but just too much weight with two squares.
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All of that packs back up into this (and my triangle base still fits in the backpack as well!). I need to get some more pvc pipe for the new rails.
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And one gratuitous shot of both rockets before I start priming and painting. I haven't cut my cases down to size yet...
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Hopefully this pad works better than SpaceX's recent test!
I'm not entirely across Jim's pad electronics testing methodology but from my perspective I plan to use Blue Ravens in both rockets to allow me to remotely arm both charges per rocket as well as the HEI staging channel in the sustainer. In fact, my 2x BRs just arrived in the mail today!Absolutely a valid way to do things. I'm still making friends with two stagers though, and as a hobbyist doing this once or twice a year, am pretty sold on @JimJarvis50 's preference to do a full up electronics test immediately before an igniter goes into a motor. May or may not stick with this method, but I have a ways to go to be comfortable enough around multi stagers to go that route. To a lesser extent, I would also prefer to not be messing with closures at the pad - I'm sure I'm going to have enough to worry about at T-20 minutes on these early flights.
Nice! Before I started doing my own electronics, I was big into Featherweight (I think I still have an operational parrot or two hanging around). Pretty cool to watch what Adrian has put together on this new one.I'm not entirely across Jim's pad electronics testing methodology but from my perspective I plan to use Blue Ravens in both rockets to allow me to remotely arm both charges per rocket as well as the HEI staging channel in the sustainer. In fact, my 2x BRs just arrived in the mail today!
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