Hanger 11 Harpoon - ROCKETS Magazine
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Hanger 11 Harpoon - ROCKETS Magazine
Volume 6, Issue 1 April 2011 8 MAGAZINE ARG Coast Optimization System Part 4 Let the Bungee take the HEAT Hanger 11 Harpoon Build a Jeff Jakob’s Nozzle MAD DOG DRAG-RACER Testing Estes’s Thrust Claims for the A10-PT motor Backup Charges News and Review $6.95 US $8.95 Canada Photo by Neil McGilvray Kerbel Geoffrey’s Solar Sailor 2.22x Upscale at ARG8 April 2011 Volume 6 Issue 1 4 EDITORIAL 6 ROCKETRY PLANET NEWS 46 By Jeff Jakob Now you can make a great nozzle 50 By Darrell Mobley 8 COAST OPTIMIZATION SYSTEM PART 4 53 56 BACKUP CHARGES By David Chance Photo by Phil Tomeo How rocketry relates to life ARG 8 By Neil McGilvray Photos by Neil McGilvray First big launch of the year 36 MAD DOG DRAG-RACE By Justin Farrand Review of Wildmans Mad Dog Kit ROCKET TRICKS: LET THE BUNGEE TAHE THE HEAT By John Ritz How to not burn your recovery 16 TESTING ESTES’S THRUST CLAIMS FOR THE A10-PT MOTOR By Garrett R. Hedrick, Elliott E. Beski, Timothy R. Lopez and Michael Courtney Students give the results to their testing By Frank Hermes Get more altitude with this system 14 BUILD A JEFF JAKOB’S NOZZLE 58 NCR LAUNCH Photos by Ray LaPanse HANGER 11 HARPOON 60 By Rod and Paula Thrasher The build and flight of this rocket kit NARAM 52 Photos by Ray LaPanse Corrections: Volume 5 Issue 6 Firgure 6, on page 23 was taken by Mike Ficco not Mike McBurnett THE OFFICAL MAGAZINE OF THE TRIPOLI ROCKETRY ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS TERRY MCCREARY - PRESIDENT PAT GORDZELIK - V. PRESIDENT STU BARRETT SECRETARY BRUCE LEE TREASURER ROCKETS MAGAZINE APRIL 2011 KEN GOOD ROBIN MEREDITH BOB SCHONER DICK EMERY DEBRA KOLOMS 3 Coast Optimization System Part 4 By Frank Hermes Photos by Frank Hermes Photo by Neil McGilvray Implementation Trying to actually implement the integration formula from Part 3 on the integer-only math of the Parallax BASIC Stamp was a bit onerous. I was using fractional conversion factors and performing division that resulted in remainders. I had some difficulty obtaining the gyro rate integration using this approach and the relatively simple, inter-only-math Parallax BS2pe. There are integer-only conversions you can make to do so, but the accuracy is limited and the processing power to do so is lacking with that microcontroller. I decided I really needed to move to floating point math capability. I would learn much later that a lot of my difficulty at this point was not due to these constraints, but rather another problem I did not recognize at the time. In addition to the integer-only difficulty, there is no convenient way to accurately set the sample rate of the BASIC Stamp since there is no access to timer control or interrupts on the BS2pe. I had to essentially set up my code, then insert some programming feedback indicator loops (e.g., turn on an LED via my code, run a hundred samples, then turn off the LED and use a stopwatch to see how long it took to run the 100 samples. Then I would divide the stopwatch time by the 100 samples in order to know what the sample rate was. Then I would go into the code and change the sample rate factor in my calculations – but I was always playing with the sample rate factor because any time I modified the code, the execution time changes and therefore the time to take 100 samples changes - tedious. 8 Even when I got the sample rate routine sort of figured out, I was still having little success in generating angles. The angles I got were very erratic and always greatly less than the actual observed orientation of my setup. If I changed one of the formula factors by an order of magnitude I could almost get there, but it was very inconsistent in nature. It was very frustrating. Though I thought I was doing things correctly, my calculated angles always seemed to be about a third of the actual observed angle. I went over things in my setup and code a hundred times and did more research to confirm that my integration formula was right. I concluded that the “looseness” of the integer-only, non-interrupt processing of the BS2pe was the culprit. So, I searched the Parallax site for an alternative. Floating Point Unit - FPU I came across the microMega Floating Point Unit, or uMFPU. Cam Thompson has produced a great chip and created a great web site at microMega. At Cam’s site you can find support for using his uMFPU with a variety of microcontrollers. With the uMFPU, I felt would be home free since I would be able to implement floating point math, as well as precise sample rates. The uMFPU contains, in addition to its built in floating point support, a couple of channels of 12-bit ADC, so it was a relatively simple process to attach my IDG gyro to one of the ADC inputs on the FPU, and then connect the FPU to WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM Rocket Tricks: Let the Bungee take the HEAT By John Ritz Ever had one of those heavy rockets (especially at the front end) that kept popping the main chute out at apogee and drifting away into the sunset? I am talking about the usual recovery method of dual deployment recovery (at least on the east coast with the tree infested lands). Sometime we end up having to put a lot of weight in the nosecone to stabilize the rocket or for other reasons. At apogee when the payload section deploys, a heavy nosecone can sometimes get yanked out prematurely with the main chute. Even when main chute deployment is intended at apogee, a heavy nose cone being kicked out like a cannon ball from a good size ejection charge can rip of the shock cord and fall loose into the ground. The kinetic energy can be quite tremendous in some big sized rockets and it is necessary to divert most of this kinetic energy somewhere else. One solution is to use a “sacrificial lamb”, in this case a short piece of bungee cord attached as in figure 1. This is the only good use of bungee cord in rocketry that I know of; to tear it apart. Figure 1: Attach a piece of bungee cord (Home Depot) between the payload section and the shock cord (tubular) at a point that is two to three times the length of the bungee. 14 WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM 8 ARG By Neil McGilvray Photos by Neil McGilvray 16 WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM Tripoli Prefect Listing Alabama Kentucky Ohio Washington (Central Alabama) Christopher Short (850) 554-6531 (Huntsville) Walt Stafford (256) 829-0869 (Birmingham) Carl Hicks (205) 924-9612 (Blue Grass) Darryl Hankes (270) 299-2424 (Northern Ohio) Chris Pearson (440) 449-2246 (T-Town Tripoli) Art Upton (419) 841-1051 (Mid Ohio) Mark Mazzon (740) 625-5027 (Puget Sound) Brad Wright (425) 246-0781 (Blackhole Amateur Rocketry) Harold Kellams (509) 536-5381 Louisiana Paul San Soucie (225) 622-1219 Alaska Oklahoma (Anchorage) Steven Cords (907) 344-8225 Maine Arizona (Cherryfield) Richard Willey (207) 546-2677 (Maine) Philip Hathaway (207) 532-9805 (Tulsa) Hal Ellis (918) 492-0599 (Oklahoma) Steven Sanders (405) 375-3656 Oregon (Paradise Valley) Mark Clark (623) 877-6814 (Phoenix) Bob Heninger (623) 505-3964 (Tuscon) Eric Burch (520) 975-6450 Neil McGilvray (410) 884-4151 (Oregon) Gary Fillible (503) 843-3137 (Portland) Greg Clark (503) 443-3705 California Massachussettes Pennsylvania (Los Angeles) Rick Magee (805) 584-6934 (Anaheim) Richard O’Neil (909) 646-9126 (Mojave Desert) Kevin Metzler (661) 256-3261 (Central California) Jack Garibaldi (209) 986-5829 (AERO-PAC) Robert Briody (408) 379-1057 Colorado (Colorado) James Russell (303) 425-7184 (North Colorado) Joe Hinton (303) 449-9344 Connecticutt (SE Connecticutt) Rob Bazinet (860) 974-3994 (Connecticutt) Christian Colby (203) 753-1974 Delaware Darren Wright (302) 777-3036 Florida Maryland Steven Schwab (508) 645-2405 Michigan (Michigan) Tony Sanfilppo (313) 632-8218 (Jackson) Scott Miller (269) 370-7929 (Michiana) Wayne Dennis (269) 236-6625 (U. 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Originally developed for the U.S. Navy to serve as its basic anti-ship missile for fleet-wide use, the AGM84 Harpoon also has been adapted for use on U.S. Air Force B-52s. 36 Harpoon Parts: Two 5.5″-diameter sections of body tube One body-tube coupler One nose cone, with bulkhead and coupler. Three sets of four fins, totaling twelve fins. One 54mm motor tube One 38mm altimeter tube Four lower centering rings Three upper centering rings Two sections of ½″ shock cord Two extreme rail buttons Altimeter bay and pre-drilled mounting board WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM Build a Jeff Jakob’s Nozzle Nozzle Carrier bulk material trim befor turning drill hole for tool attach to tool cut to size X 4 center and mark for turning 46 after turning WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM ROCKETS MAGAZINE APRIL 2011 49 Testing Estes’s Thrust Claims for the A10-PT motor By Garrett R. Hedrick, Elliott E. Beski, Timothy R. Lopez and Michael Courtney Abstract: This article describes the thrust curve for Estes model A10-PT rocket motors. The rocket-motor thrusts were measured using a force plate. Key findings are: 1) The propellant mass in the rockets is significantly less than what Estes publishes. 2) The rocket thrust curve is less than what Estes has published. Failure to meet the published impulse specification is due, in part, to less than the expected efficiency, but is mainly due to putting less propellant in the rocket motors than the published specification. Keywords: peak thrust, impulse, thrust curve, model rocket, rocket propellant I. Introduction This article presents measurements of the thrust curves (force vs. time) and propellant mass of the Estes A10-PT rocket motor and compares them with the company’s published specifications. Rocket-motor thrust curves play a significant role in rocket performance. Impulse and specific impulse are important rocket-motor performance parameters. Impulse is the total area under the force vs. time thrust curve in units of Newtons times seconds (Ns). Specific impulse is the impulse (Ns) divided by the weight of propellant (N), thus it has units of seconds. The lower the rocket-motor impulse, the lower the velocity and the lower the peak altitude attained. 50 Figure 1: Force plate for measuring rocket-engine thrust curves. The rocket motor is attached to the bolt extending out of the plate on the right, which is set on top of the three force sensors on the left. (The photo shows one aluminum-cased rocket motor attached to the bolt and two other aluminum cased motors on the lower left corner of the plate, as well as two brown paper–cased Estes A10-PT rocket motors.) WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM MAD DOG DRAG-RACER By Justin Farrand Photo courtesy of Brent Hill ROCKETS MAGAZINE APRIL 2011 53 Backup Charges By David Chance Photo courtesy of Phil Tomeo Have you ever noticed that rocketry can teach you lessons about life? Do you realize that the hobby itself teaches us things that many of us might never have come to appreciate? High Power, Low Power, Mid Power, Odd-Roc, Hybrid, or Experimental, they all have something in common. Whether your rocket flies low and slow, or zips to the nether regions while being chased by a thin wisp of smoke, each and every rocket teaches us a very important lesson. No matter how much planning went into the design, how much detail went into the construction, how meticulously the rocket has been prepped . . . once that button is pushed; it is one part science and one part luck. The best-laid plans are only a memory when the electrical current passes through the igniter. As the rocket glides up the rod or rail, it leaves behind all control that has been exercised over it. All we can hope for is that this object with no mind of its own will follow the path that has been laid for it. A few days ago, the festival affectionately known as Red Glare concluded. The smoke trails had cleared, the rockets were packed, the trailers were loaded, and a peaceful quiet returned to Higgs Farm. This ninth iteration, hosted by those big dogs of MDRA, is but one launch out of many that have taken place over the past few months across the country. There was LDRS in California, Oktoberfest in Colorado, Rocktober Skies in Alabama, Freedom Launch in South Carolina, Balls in Nevada, and many others. All of these launches, even in different parts of the country, had one thing in common. They all had a guy like me. During Red Glare IX, I was one of those guys of whom you would say,” If he didn’t have bad luck, he wouldn’t have any luck at all.” All launches seem to have a guy like that, and during this particular weekend I drew the short straw. I flew five rockets, and out of those, four were heavily damaged 56 and the fifth barely escaped certain destruction. Although each rocket had already boasted a successful track record, this launch was different. All of the planning, all the prepping, and that one part science all left town for the weekend, leaving only the bad luck. The first rocket crashed to the ground, breaking a fin, when the parachute got charred by hot ejection gases. The second crashed to the ground when the shock cord broke away from the centering ring. The third suffered the same fate as the second, plus the added insult of a nasty zipper. The fourth broke a fin, due either to the landing itself or to the wind using the parachute to drag the rocket over some uneven ground. All of these rockets had flown successfully before, but on this day a stroke of bad luck or unforeseen events would mar each one. The fifth rocket was Buttercup. This is the one I want to tell you about. At 9 feet 11 inches tall, she was to blast off with one of my experimental M-1700 loads. The detailed planning of this launch had to be meticulously thought out. A rocket this size under that much power using a homemade motor must be given respect. Each detail of the prep work was checked and double-checked until the moment she sat on the pad and the electronics chirped. When the preparations were complete, it was now time for that one part science and one part luck to determine if she would fly successfully. When the button was pushed, the ignition flash was instant. A split second later, the motor chamber was pressurized, and Buttercup was lifting. The roar was remarkable, and the flames blasted the launch tower as she quickly flew heavenward. Other than some pieces of casting tube being spit out the nozzle end, the flight was beautiful and majestic. It was a moment to behold. Buttercup achieved apogee at over 3000 feet, and the WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM Brad Morse’s Liberty L2 on a J-240 Chris LaPanse’s L3 on an M-3400 Sean Serell’s It’s Awesome Time Baby on an M-2505 58 WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM Al Zelnick’s Icarus L1 H-90 Dwayne Schmel’s Lets Get Kracken on a J-350 60 Boyd and Ryder’s FatMan on a H-400 WWW.ROCKETSMAGAZINE.COM 62 63
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