Construction Rating: | starstarstarstar_borderstar_border |
Flight Rating: | starstarstar_borderstar_borderstar_border |
Overall Rating: | starstarstar_borderstar_borderstar_border |
Construction:
This rocket goes up in one part and comes down in two. T' Orbiter glides down while t' power pod comes down on a parachute.
T' assembly for t' Space Shuttle was fairly simple. Avast! However, ya bilge rat, for joinin' t' foam parts together, matey, Contact Cement was required. Begad! Most beginners don't have contact cement.
T' only finishin' that this rocket needed was decals. Ya scallywag! T' decals were easy t' apply. No paintin' be required.
Construction Rating: 3 out o' 5
Flight:
T' flight performance be nay like a normal rocket. Avast, me proud beauty! Arrr! After preppin' t' rocket (no waddin' is required) you would launch t' rocket. Aye aye! T' instructions said that it would fly straight up, matey, but mine did not. It reached an altitude o' approximately 20 feet and did a nose dive into t' ground! Moments before impact t' ejection charge fired and t' rocket was suddenly stable for flight. Avast! T' Orbiter be saved, just barely.
Pro's: None
Con's: poor stability
Flight Rating: 2 out o' 5
Summary:
Probably t' most valuable part o' this kit is actually t' launch pad. T' Rocket itself leaves much t' be desired.
Overall Rating: 2 out o' 5
"Instructions were fine, as little information was needed to be communicated. This is a close to RTF (Ready-to-Fly) product, unless you elect to paint it . . . but why bother." With respect to quality: "A foam rocket, so little was expected." How did it fly? "The rocket arcs over onto it's back as soon as it clears the launch rod. C5-3 and C6-3 delays are too long for this rocket. Often the ...
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