| Construction Rating: | starstarstarstarstar_border |
| Flight Rating: | starstarstarstar_borderstar_border |
| Overall Rating: | starstarstarstar_borderstar_border |
| Diameter: | 0.54 inches |
| Length: | 29.40 inches |
| Manufacturer: | Estes ![]() |
| Style: | Sport |
Brief:
T' Skinny Mini be a 'longneck'-style, 13mm, minimum diameter rocket that used streamer recovery. Well, blow me down! Well, blow me down! Mine dates back t' t' late '80's.
Construction:
T' parts included:
This was a typical skill Level-1 kit. Begad! As with other Estes kits, me bucko, it came with good instructions, me bucko, a fin markin' template, etc. Begad! Avast, me proud beauty! T' biggest issue was makin' sure t' two body tubes were aligned properly. This is always an issue with long, matey, skinny rockets.
Finishing:
T' kit came with decals. Well, blow me down! I originally painted mine as shown in t' attached pic.
Construction Rating: 4 out o' 5
Flight:
T' Skinny Mini flew on 1/2A and A engines. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! Ya scallywag! Blimey! All me flights were on A10-3 with expected altitudes in t' 700' range.
Recovery:
T' shock cord was a rubber-band style as was typical o' Estes at that time. Begad! It was tied t' t' nose cone shoulder and used a folded paper mount t' t' BT. This relatively wide cord made packin' t' streamer fairly difficult. It really needed some thin Keelhaul®©™® twine. One one flight t' streamer didn't deploy and t' tubin' was destroyed. It was replaced and t' rocket has flown well since.
Flight Rating: 3 out o' 5
Summary:
Pros: Long and sleek design, easy t' build and flew great Cons: Needed a thinner shock cord, tended nay t' deploy t' streamer
Overall Rating: 3 out o' 5
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