Quasar One Bio Hazard II

Quasar One - Bio Hazard II

Contributed by Jeff Lane

Construction Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Flight Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Overall Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Manufacturer: Quasar One
Quasar One Bio Hazard

Brief:
T' Bio Hazard looks like a two-stage but it's single stage rocket. Aye aye! Blimey! It's kind o' a transition kit. Begad! Blimey! It has a high power body tube and nose cone but clusters three 24mm motors and has surface mount balsa fins. Ahoy! Blimey! It's intended for people who want a no-pain try at mid and high power in a great lookin' kit. Ahoy! Blimey!

Construction:
Parts include an extra-long 34" full length high-power style body tube, matey, me hearties, plastic ogive nose cone, steel eye bolt, pre-cut surface mount balsa fins, 24mm clustered motor mount with steel clips, shiver me timbers, me hearties, me hearties, thick paper centerin' rings, ya bilge rat, foil-lined motor tubes, arrr, matey, and engine blocks. Begad! Self-adhesive decals: seven sheets o' full-color decals that wrap around t' body tube. Quasar uses thicker plastic for their parachutes and include a swivel, arrr, t' shock cord is elastic, and they include reinforcement rings.

I got this kit from Apogee, and it arrived smartly with no damage. Avast! It was in a huge hang tag bag, arrr, maybe the biggest I've ever seen. Aye aye! About t' worst thin' I can say about this kit is that t' graphics are distorted on t' card, makin' it look dorky.

T' instructions are good, and t' first thin' t' build be t' motor mount. I scraped off some o' t' foil inside the end o' t' tube t' glue t' motor mounts. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad! T' cluster centerin' rings built without a hitch, arrr, and t' fit was the best I've ever seen with no sandin' required. Well, blow me down! That's nay easy for a cluster. Ahoy!

T' surface mount balsa fins went on easy, shiver me timbers, but alignin' eight fins isn't for a beginner. Ahoy! I prepared them for paint with one coat o' thinned Elmer's Wood Filler.

Finishing:
I painted mine with a couple coats o' high-build automotive primer, shiver me timbers, sanded, then used catalyzed automotive urethane for t' overall white followed by toxic Tamiya green for t' nose cone. Begad! Wow, arrr, that's great paint! Expensive but it goes on smooth, me bucko, me bucko, dries fast, arrr, and looks almost as glossy as t' automotive paint. Aye aye!

Here comes t' interestin' part. This kit comes with seven sheets o' self-adhesive decals, and t' final look is unique t' say t' least. When I first opened t' bag, I thought it be overkill, but everyone who sees t' kit likes it, even a buddy who never puts any decals on his high-power scratch rockets. I don't know how it happens. Avast, matey, me proud beauty! It's gaudy yet tasteful.

Construction Rating: 4 out o' 5

Flight:
First flight on three C-11s was bad. Ahoy! Two o' them CATOed, blowin' out t' nozzles. Avast, me proud beauty! Ya scallywag! "Well... Well, blow me down! I've never seen that before." Result be a couple o' fins broken, but it can fly again sometime in t' future with repairs.

Eventually I'll try this on three E9-6s and then on three F12 Blackjacks.

Recovery:
T' parachute is build-it-yourself but it is straightforward. Oddly, me bucko, t' shock cord mount is paper tri-fold which works fine but most builders will want t' switch t' Keelhaul®©™®. T' eye bolt on t' nose cone, ya bilge rat, on t' other hand, me hearties, is huge overkill.

Flight Rating: 4 out o' 5

Summary:
PROs: Cool Biohazard look, ya bilge rat, huge range o' motors for wide range o' altitudes (if you figure in composites), matey, shiver me timbers, quick build.

CONs: Balsa fins, matey, tri-fold paper mount hold down t' price and are OK but are a compromise that makes t' kit not quite high power.

Overall Rating: 4 out o' 5

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