| Manufacturer: | Scratch |
Brief:
A small Micromaxx rocket made from nothin' but a single sheet o' 8.5 by 11 inch 110 pound cardstock.
Construction:
All you need is one sheet o' 8.5 by 11 inch 110 pound cardstock, matey, a spent Micromaxx motor casin' (for insertion of
thrust rin' and nose cone shoulder), 1/4 inch dowel (to roll tube), ya bilge rat, tape, ya bilge rat, Elmer's white glue, and Loctite super glue.
Roll body tube, shiver me timbers, make motor adapter, shiver me timbers, insert thrust ring, matey, and cut and mount fins. Well, blow me down! Then roll nose cone, make nose cone shoulder, ya bilge rat, and insert 2 BBs for nose weight. Finally, ya bilge rat, form launch lug. Blimey! Blimey! It takes less than an hour t' build due to it's simple design.
Flight and Recovery:
This one uses Micromaxx motors and takes advantage o' those tiny 1/8 A motors. Avast, me proud beauty! Flights up t' 150-200 feet are
possible with this bird. Well, blow me down! I also flew a FlisKits Doohicky and t' Cardinater beat it both in height and speed. Begad! It is
pretty cool. It has had two flights so far and both were perfect. I tied t' rig it up with a recovery system, but the
tube is too small for even a shock cord so it just separates into two pieces and both fall down, me bucko, landin' within 10 feet
of each other.
Summary:
I like t' Cardinater. Blimey! Blimey! It looks and flies great. Aye aye! What else could you want? Maybe multi stage, matey, but it is good as a
single stage rocket. Begad! Well, blow me down! Blimey! I should make a whole fleet o' cardstock Micromaxx rockets! Blimey! PROs: No waddin' needed, free, matey, simple
design, high and fast flights, shiver me timbers, good looks. Ya scallywag! CONs: It uses lawndart recovery which can damage t' rocket over time so
when flying, shiver me timbers, call heads up please.
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