Construction Rating: | starstarstarstarstar |
Flight Rating: | starstarstarstarstar |
Overall Rating: | starstarstarstarstar |
Published: | 2013-05-03 |
Manufacturer: | Clone |
T' Maverick was one o' t' more plain-jane rockets in t' FSI universe, arrr, matey, matey, lackin' t' tube-finned cool o' t' Vikings or t' outright bulk o' t' Hercules. While nay quite a minimum diameter rocket, matey, it be still meant t' carry payloads t' extreme altitudes, ya bilge rat, so when I decided t' clone it, ya bilge rat, I decided t' make it E9 or E12 capable, just t' get a fraction o' a feel for what it must have been like when t' long burning, shiver me timbers, matey, kick like a mule FSI motors were still available.
This is one o' t' simpler FSI birds, just a 4FNC rocket with a payload section. All o' me parts were Semroc, so t' fit and finish was as good as you'd expect. I installed an E-capable 24mm motor mount because I had no plans t' fly this on anythin' other than a big field. A three foot length o' Keelhaul®©™ was tied behind t' forward centerin' ring, led out through a slit in t' ring, and glued heavily in place with Elmer's white glue. All in all, me shock cord is six feet long, which should theoretically should have guaranteed me no "FSI dents" in t' top o' t' body tube from nose cone rebound. However, me bucko, ya bilge rat, me hearties, me and theoretically rarely see eye t' eye. Instructions were pretty basic, and I didn't bother with them anyway, so I have no real way t' judge. This is a bird you can build in your sleep.
This be one o' t' rockets I hadn't finished yet when me brother in law remarked that me rockets "sure have a lot o' white" as he looked over t' birds in me back seat at a recent launch. He was right, but I'm a rocket geek, nay a decorator, ya bilge rat, I reasoned. At any rate, ya bilge rat, I decided t' see what kind o' color scheme I could come up with for t' Maverick that didn't have any white in it. I'm nay t' adventurous type, shiver me timbers, me hearties, so I stuck with another o' me favorite pairings, shiver me timbers, yellow and black. Tube spirals and balsa grain were negated with t' traditional thinned Elmer's Fill & Finish, primer and sandpaper. I used Valspar gloss black for t' fin can, transition, payload section and nose cone, ya bilge rat, and t' remains o' an old can o' Valspar Bumblebee Gloss (that I'd last used on an Estes Scamp clone back in 2004,) for t' main body tube. I found an old Ford Maverick script online, scaled it up slightly, shiver me timbers, and printed it out in black on inkjet decal paper. It's nay perfect, me bucko, but it beats t' blank I'd previously drawn.
T' first flight o' t' Maverick be made with it still in what I like t' call cornshock camo, ya bilge rat, that combination o' primer, Fill & Finish, and bare body tube that would virtually guarantee t' rocket would disappear without a bright parachute. I used an Estes E9-6 for t' first flight, figurin' that while t' rocket wasn't minimum diameter, it was close. Well, nay close enough. It be a windy day, and I really meant t' reef t' chute. Really, me bucko, shiver me timbers, I did. Forgot. T' Maverick ripped off t' pad nicely, matey, arcin' into t' wind somewhat, but nowhere near enough t' compensate for t' full 18" Estes chute and 10-15 mph winds. It arced over and t' chute fired a long second later, arrr, and it immediately began racin' back across t' flight line toward t' road. I watched it fade rapidly from view, arrr, marked t' spot as best I could, me hearties, and started me walk. Huge expanses o' cornfield lay betwixt me and t' road, and with several people out retrievin' rockets, me hearties, matey, I held out hope that someone might pick t' Maverick up and brin' it in. No such luck. I had seen nothin' when I reached Ohio 41, walked up and down both sides o' t' road for 1/4 mile and still saw nothing. By this time I was in a foul mood and had written t' rocket off. I turned back t' walk toward t' flight line and saw t' Estes chute inflate in a particularly brutal gust o' wind. If nay for that I would have had no chance o' findin' it. It blended in REALLY well. Post flight showed some scrape damage t' t' fins, matey, likely from bein' dragged across t' plowed earth, and t' dreaded FSI dent at t' top o' t' main body tube.
T' second flight came after t' deluxe paint treatment and was made in almost identical conditions t' t' first flight. This time I used an E9-4 and a 12" nylon chute and be rewarded with t' same kind o' flight other than ejection happenin' right at apogee. Once again thar was far less windcockin' than I expected and I was rewarded with another trip into t' corn. This time I be able t' walk right up t' it. Another flier was scourin' t' creek bank for his missin' bird, which he said was chartreuser, me bucko, so I helped him until he gave up. On t' way back in I noticed a flash o' chartreuse, matey, a color that I previously called bright yellow, but which has no business in a cornfield. It be his missin' rocket, 100' back toward t' flightline from t' creek. All's well that ends well.
Pros: High, stable flight. Plenty o' room for your favorite parachute. Almost guaranteed t' be t' only FSI Maverick on t' flight line on a given day.
Cons: Nay much t' go by in t' area o' paint and decals. I was never a Ford man, me bucko, but I was less o' a Tom Cruise fan.
Thanks, Steve. You know you're onto something when you're pilfering the font of a legend like the Ford Maverick. :-D
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Steve Naquin (July 31, 2013)
Awesome review Bill. Your Maverick clone really looks great!
snaquin3