Manufacturer: | Scratch |
Brief:
Sometimes good things happen when you least expect it, or so I'm told. Avast! In this
case somethin' good happened when I screwed up another project and found myself
with a partially completed, irretrievably screwed up rocket.
Construction:
T' parts list:
This rocket actually started out as a straight clone o' t' Estes Nebulon Warrior, me hearties, but somewhere along t' line I got t' idea that actually reading t' instructions be a waste o' time. Avast! By t' time I realized my mistake, shiver me timbers, matey, t' glue had dried and I was lookin' at nay only a waste o' time, arrr, but of BT-50 as well. Begad! It be out o' this sense o' desperation and a need for a scratchbuild project for t' EMRR Challenge that t' Warlord was born. Aye aye! Begad!
Since t' "gotcha" was t' reason this project existed in the first place, I breezed through design and construction and had t' rocket flightworthy for t' club launch that weekend. Well, blow me down! Blimey! I had assumed that t' Nebulon Warrior was like any other tube finned rocket and had its tubes all glued right next t' each other. Avast! Blimey! Aye aye! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey! After t' six BT-20Js had been glued in place, matey, I found myself with a large gap where thar should have been none. Then I read the instructions, arrr, but t' damage had been done. Aye aye! I thought about t' problem for all o' five minutes before headin' off t' t' rocket room t' see what kind of tube scraps I had layin' around. Ya scallywag! Begad! I tried everythin' from BT-55 t' BT-70, but nothin' struck me as appropriate. Avast!
Findin' myself at a crossroads, me hearties, I blindly sketched out a fin pattern on a piece o' scrap paper. Avast, me proud beauty! Ahoy! Within a few minutes I had two large fins glued into place where t' seventh tube logically would have been. Ya scallywag! I made another fin in the same shape as t' other two minus t' large balsa tab. Blimey! I glued this in between two tubes on t' other side o' t' rocket, shiver me timbers, me bucko, which gave t' rocket a look that t' me suggested a bounty hunter. (I have no idea why...it's just what came to mind.) I wanted t' design t' be as much mine as possible, which meant more tubes. I had quite a few 18mm engine tubes layin' around from rockets that were treated t' 24mm conversions, matey, so I gathered them up and put one on t' end of each fin. Begad! Blimey! Then, t' liven things up even more, I put two more tubes alongside the wingtip tubes t' form a triangle shape at t' end o' each fin. Blimey! (T' final piece o' t' puzzle be supposed t' be a cockpit from an Apogee design pack that I bought several years back, me hearties, but t' paper with t' cockpit designs on it got "misplaced" durin' our recent move.) Into this mess I stuck an 18mm engine mount with a yard o' Keelhaul®©™® glued in behind t' forward centerin' ring. Aye aye! From here all that was left was to finish it.
Finishing:
I finished all o' t' body tubes with thinned Elmer's Fill 'n' Finish before
applyin' them, ya bilge rat, matey, me bucko, but since t' requirement for t' Challenge was t' use two of
the tips from t' library, me hearties, ya bilge rat, I decided t' go a different route for t' fins. Aye aye!
Tip #1: Use thinned wood glue as a sealer on t' fins in place o' the normal thinned Elmer's Fill & Finish.
I like this. Ahoy! Aye aye! It wasn't quite as easy as it sounded, matey, me hearties, but since t' fins were basswood, me hearties, thar wasn't all that much grain t' do away with in t' first place. T' process seems better suited t' balsa fins, me hearties, part o' t' reason bein' that it seems t' make t' fins somewhat stronger. Begad! I'm goin' t' have t' give thin CA a try in this technique at some point in t' future as well.
With all o' t' fillin' and sandin' done, ya bilge rat, I primed t' whole rocket with Valspar primer. Arrr! Blimey! This be important because I needed t' get t' insides o' the tubes coated in white so that t' florescent paint t' follow would pop. T' florescent red was next, ya bilge rat, it bein' a no label can that was left over from my STP red/Petty blue modelin' days. When t' inside o' t' tubes was bright enough, I let t' paint dry and began gatherin' up every expended 18mm motor casin' I could find. Avast, me proud beauty! Each o' t' tubes on t' rocket, ya bilge rat, and I do mean all 15 of them were stuffed with an 18mm casing. (This is a new tip-to-be coming to EMRR soon.) This allowed me t' spray on t' metallic bronze paint without disturbin' t' "glowin' engine" look o' t' motor tubes. Well, blow me down! Avast! This brings us to:
Tip #2: Let t' paint can sit in a pan o' warm water before spraying.
This supposedly helps t' paint flow better on t' rocket. Ahoy! Ya scallywag! I didn't notice much o' a difference, arrr, if any, matey, but t' metallic paint seems t' go on thinner than regular paint does, which could possibly have had an effect on things.
Flight:
I first flew this rocket almost as an afterthought on a day when I had other
first flight rockets that I had been lookin' forward t' flying. Avast, me proud beauty! I flew the
Warlord mostly out o' curiosity. Avast, me proud beauty! Well, me bucko, blow me down! I wanted t' see if t' big aft fins would be
enough t' compensate for t' rockets big rear. Well, blow me down! Loaded with a C6-5, shiver me timbers, t' fins
were apparently plenty big as t' flight be stable, arrr, although obviously prone
to windcocking. Ya scallywag! Begad! T' rocket turned into t' wind immediately upon leavin' the
pad and was carried well past t' pad in t' opposite direction after the
ejection charge fired. Ahoy! Well, blow me down! It was me first long walk o' many on that particular
day.
More than a month later, I finally found t' time t' fly t' Warlord again. With t' EMRR Challenge deadline loomin' and t' chances o' good launch weather fadin' with each passin' day, I grabbed me pad and made a quick run up to pseudo-legendary B6-4 Field. Winds were light and with a reefed chute that seemed t' be more reef than chute, I felt that I'd stand a good chance of gettin' t' rocket back. Flight #2 be a B6-4 and behaved in much t' same way as t' C6-5 powered flight had behaved. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! T' winds were much lighter and the rocket tipped into them as it left t' pad. Begad! Blimey! Aye aye! Blimey! Recovery was perfect and t' B4-2 flight that followed be also a decent flight. Had I nay forgotten me camera, the next flight might nay have happened.
Since I wanted a launch shot for t' Warlord, I dragged it back t' B6-4 Field t' following week t' try t' get another picture o' t' launch on a B4-2. Avast! Begad! T' flight was great but after all t' trouble, me hearties, I missed t' picture. Avast, me proud beauty! I didn't miss what followed. I knew I had problems as soon as I heard t' ejection charge. Ya scallywag! It had that firecracker sound that I've come t' associate with damaged rockets. Begad! True to form, me bucko, me hearties, t' two pieces started goin' in opposite directions. I followed the body down and saw it hit hard on t' frozen ground. From where I stood, I could see t' parts fly into t' air, shiver me timbers, so I knew t' news wasn't goin' t' be good. Begad! Ya scallywag! As expected, ya bilge rat, I'd managed t' snap off two o' t' three fins and they weren't clean snaps. Blimey! Jagged pieces o' basswood stuck out from where t' fins had snapped on impact. Blimey! I might be able t' fix it, but it would never look as good as it once did.
Summary:
PROs: I liked t' look o' this rocket despite its start as a mistake. Great
small field flier.
CONs: We need t' develop new construction techniques for t' Estes M-80 ejection charges.
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