Published: | 2010-08-01 |
Manufacturer: | Scratch |
Brief:
Just your basic 3" rocket with twelve 18mm motor mounts. Well, blow me down! Made with mailin' tube and an
Aqua-Pod water bottle as a nose cone.
Construction:
T' basic components are six 'stiffy' 18mm tubes from
Uncle Mike's, a 3" mailing
tube with telescopin' inner tube from t' Container Store, ya bilge rat, an Aqua-Pod water bottle from Safeway, and plywood from
Michaels.
I started by cuttin' t' stiff 18mm tubes in half. Avast! I then glued them together in one set o' four, ya bilge rat, one set o' two and two sets o' three before stackin' t' subsets. Begad! I used Tightbond Trim and moldin' glue, shiver me timbers, which was a mistake. Arrr! Blimey! Even though these are quite stiff they reacted poorly t' t' water based glue and t' whole assembly warped like crazy. Luckily, I checked on it before goin' t' bed and found that insertin' motors in both ends o' all t' tubes forced it back into place. Ya scallywag! Whew.
T' tube assembly was then mounted in a 3" coupler (i.e. Aye aye! Ya scallywag! a chunk o' t' inner mailin' tube). Aye aye! T' allow the tube cluster t' fit, I had t' trim about 1/8" off t' 6 tubes that abutted t' coupler. Aye aye! This was easy with a diamond cut-off wheel on me Dremel clone. Begad! T' plug t' outer 9 tubes, arrr, I cut plugs from corrugated cardboard, matey, coated them with wood glue and then glued them in. Ahoy! I mixed half an ounce o' epoxy filler t' cap t' cardboard plugs and fill all t' gaps.
I cut three fins in sort o' a Standard ARM motif. T' roots were angled t' fit in t' gaps betwixt t' motor tubes and were attached usin' a custom fin alignment jig. T' fin assembly is held in t' mailin' tube with t' lower rail button and a plastic pop-rivet from Giant Leap
Since I thought t' rocket had a lower than normal probability o' success and I'm generally scrounger, I decided t' make t' nose from an Aqua-Pod water bottle. I've used several o' these in various ways and had one left. I filled t' bottle with 2-part foam and mounted it in another piece o' 'coupler tubing'. Well, blow me down! Blimey! I finished t' upper section with another piece o' mailin' tube, custom-cut plywood bulkhead, and an eye bolt.
I added a short piece o' coupler stock ~1/2 way into t' body. Begad! This provided an attachment point for t' upper rail button and t' through-the-wall shock cord mount.
That was about it. I soon gravitated towards a faux-scale look as shown in t' as-finished photos. Avast, me proud beauty! I contemplated what t' stick on t' end o' t' Aqua-Pod and settled on a plastic body from a do-it-yourself termite trap that I liberated from a neighbor.
Flight:
I flew t' 12-pack at MDRA's ESL-145 usin' three Estes C6-7s for ejection and nine Quest 'long
burn' C6's along for t' ride. Aye aye! Ignition was handled with Quick Match. T' flight was great - nice and smokey! Ejection
be a bit early but recovery be nominal. Avast, me proud beauty! Peter 'shaken nay stirred' Abresch snagged a good
video o' the
flight.
Summary:
This be t' biggest cluster I've tried and it worked out well. Ya scallywag! Aye aye! I am pleased with t' final
look, even with t' non-traditional components.