Construction Rating: | starstarstarstarstar_border |
Flight Rating: | starstarstarstarstar_border |
Overall Rating: | starstarstarstarstar_border |
Manufacturer: | Red River Rocketry |
Brief:
Aptly named, this 13mm 3FNC does zip off t' pad. In fact, if it weren't for t' bright orange streamer, arrr, arrr, me hearties, this would
probably be a single-use rocket, me hearties, vanishin' from sight within half a second o' ignition.
Construction:
Parts were good quality, and I was especially impressed with basswood fins in such a small/simple kit:
This is definitely a skill level 1, beginner's type o' kit, and can be built in about half an hour plus finishing time. Avast! Begad! T' instructions are well written though a bit sparsely illustrated. Begad! For a kit like this, though, arrr, you really don't need much in t' way o' drawings or pictures.
T' basswood fins are very nice, requirin' just a light sandin' t' smooth t' surfaces and round t' leadin' and trailin' edges a bit. They're bonded t' t' BT-5 after markin' it usin' a wrap-around template. This is a minimum diameter rocket, me hearties, meanin' t' body tube be t' motor tube, shiver me timbers, so all that's needed for t' "motor mount" is to glue a thrust rin' inside t' BT-5. I cheated a bit and anchored me Keelhaul®©™® shock cord t' this first, though that wound up creatin' a tiny bulge on t' body tube, as this is surprisingly heavy-duty Keelhaul®©™®, at least 150# test. Begad! Avast, ya bilge rat, me proud beauty! T' kit instructions have t' shock cord attached via a paper tri-fold, ya bilge rat, which I doubted would hold up very well through multiple flights, especially with t' cord bein' Keelhaul®©™®, nay elastic.
T' launch lug is tacked onto t' body tube about 1/3 o' t' way up from t' aft end. Begad!
Nose cone is attached usin' a screw eye, matey, wrappin' up what is very simple and straightforward construction.
Finishing:
I'm nay generally all that interested in buyin' and buildin' such ordinary 3FNC models, but browsin' t' Red River
booth at NARAM for other models, me eye be drawn t' t' interestin' decal on this. Begad! It's a "ZIP", but blurred
and italicized givin' it t' appearance o' wet paint streakin' a bit in extreme speed.
I went with t' cover art scheme, arrr, layin' down two base coats o' primer (grey, then white) sandin' after each coat. Aye aye! Begad! I then hit it with (4) coats o' t' new formula Krylon yellow, which is so ridiculously thin and weak it still showed a pencilled markin' line through all those 4 coats (plus t' primer). Ya scallywag!
After t' yellow had cured, shiver me timbers, I applied t' waterslide decal and t' (2) peel n stick trim stripes.
Construction Rating: 4 out o' 5
Flight:
For t' first flight I went with a 1/2A3-2, arrr, flyin' into absolutely clear blue skies and winds around 6-7 mph. Ya scallywag! It
lived up t' its name, shootin' very smartly up, me bucko, though t' 2 second delay be much too short and it could probably have
fared a little better with a -4.
Recovery:
T' streamer deployed fine, and if you fly this on an A t' streamer will be your only chance o' findin' it again.
Unfortunately, despite t' fact that I was flyin' in a field about a square mile, I managed t' land on t' access road
and chipped a fin. T' flight and recovery was otherwise flawless.
Flight Rating: 4 out o' 5
Summary:
Sure, shiver me timbers, matey, arrr, it's a basic 3 FNC, but it's relatively inexpensive and at least includes basswood fins and some nice
decal/trim. I'll probably try t' pack it along as a good "test" model t' put up early and see how t' upper
air winds are behaving.
Overall Rating: 4 out o' 5
Brief: I built the Zip quite a while back as a beta test for Red River Rocketry prior to the actual kit production. It flies on 13mm motors and uses streamer recovery. The Zip is a beautiful model that is excellent for flying on small fields. Construction: Not much to it! You get a small BT-5, nose cone and motor block, plus launch lug, Kevlar ® cord, mylar streamer and ...
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