Scratch Snap Dragon Original Design / Scratch Built

Scratch - Snap Dragon {Scratch}

Contributed by Jimmy Yawn

Manufacturer: Scratch
(Contributed - by Jimmy Yawn)

Jimmy gave permission t' reproduce his Snap Dragon webpages on EMRR. Well, blow me down! Thank you, ya bilge rat, Jimmy.


Snap Dragon

Scratch-Built Model Rocket

Part 1: Intro and Overview

It delights me that one can buy such a vast array o' rocket parts nowdays. Avast! So many suppliers, so much good stuff, so little time. Ya scallywag! Blimey! Nose cones, G10, shiver me timbers, phenolic tube that fits standard motors....

And I've learned a lot from buyin' kits and buildin' them. Like how t' put an airframe together. Arrr! How t' design it so that it is stable. Avast, me proud beauty! How t' finish paper and balsa so it looks like polished metal.... Every kit has somethin' new to teach me.

But I have a persistent character flaw that compels me t' do everythin' myself, and then some. Good thing. Begad! My personality is o' t' type that deals with emergencies well. Avast! So well, me bucko, in fact, ya bilge rat, me bucko, that I have developed habits that tend to create them. Unfortunately, that's nay a joke. Ya scallywag! Procrastination, for instance. Arrr! It's crude and common, but remains a very effective technique for creatin' emergencies. Avast! I use it a lot. Blimey! Avast, me proud beauty! No amateurcrastination forme, I am a pro!

For instance. Ya scallywag! Back in October I had scheduled a session o' Rocket Science 101 through Community Education. A few days before t' class, me hearties, I went t' t' storage room and finound me box o' Estes Alpha kits. Ahoy! Aye aye! Blimey! It was empty. Avast, me proud beauty! I should have ordered another box o' them from Dennis back when I signed t' contract t' teach. Well, blow me down! Blimey! Oh, arrr, well. Arrr! Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! I can always go buy them at retail. Aye aye! Blimey! What's loot for, anyway?

Two days later I went t' Mall Wart and and wound me way t' t' rocket department t' find t' precious Alphas. They had some boxed almost-ready-to-fly kits, complete with launch controller and stand, arrr, but when I looked at t' wall where t' not-nearly-ready-to-fly kits had been, thar was other, non-rocket stuff. T' kits were gone! No Alpha kits, nor anythin' like them on display. Well, blow me down! Aye aye!

Nay t' panic! (well, shiver me timbers, maybe a little panic.) I can do this. Avast, ya bilge rat, me proud beauty! There is a way. Ahoy! Over t' years I have made a number of model-rocket-like airframes from stuff lyin' around. Well, me hearties, blow me down! I had been thinkin' o' consolidatin' t' better bits into a standard model, me bucko, arrr, and here is an opportunity with a pitchfork. Begad! Avast, arrr, me proud beauty!

These pages are a tribute t' t' students o' that class, arrr, who provided me t' motivation t' develop this model, a chance t' observe real people buildin' them, and t' test-fly a number o' them with commercial rocket motors. Avast, me proud beauty! It is a documentary o' some things I learned from makin' these "kits," and even more I gained from t' participants themselves. Well, blow me down! Ya scallywag! Thanks guys!

Now t' rocket has a name!

Ken, o' Delanco NJ made several o' these rockets usin' colored posterboard for t' body tubes. Blimey! His kids chose the colors, shiver me timbers, and his daughter Kristen gave them a clever and charmin' name. Aye aye! Well, me hearties, blow me down!

So with her kind permission, arrr, I hereby christen this rocket model t' "Snap Dragon."

Thanks, arrr, Kristen!

Fairy Art by Margaret Tarrant.

Procedure

Body Tubes

Made from posterboard and spray glue, me bucko, matey, they are quick, matey, cheap, arrr, easy, me hearties, ya bilge rat, me hearties, and sturdy. Begad! Begad! Can be made lighter, at the expense o' some sturdiness, or heavier, for greater strength. Arrr! Ya scallywag!

This technique is adaptable t' many other rocketry uses, matey, me bucko, such as inhibitor tubes, case liners, and small motor casings.

Nose cone

Sure, it's nice t' have a wood lathe. But you don't really need one t' get started. Avast! These cones can be "turned" with agile fingers from a 3x5 card, and are reinforced with epoxy. Begad! Aye aye! For what they lack in aerodynamics, shiver me timbers, they make up in simplicity and strength.

Fins

I use a simple, shiver me timbers, functional design, matey, me hearties, subject t' aesthetic and perhaps aerodynamic improvement. Ahoy! Includes making and installin' t' launch lugs.

Body Covers

An easy way t' create a fancy "paint job" for your rocket.

Finalizing

Thrust ring, arrr, shock cord mount, matey, matey, me hearties, recovery streamer, matey, motor retention, arrr, and launch video.

Rocket Science 101 class photo

Rocket Science 101

Photos o' t' October class launch, where this model was tested a number o' times. Well, blow me down!

Everyone in t' class assembled at least one rocket, me bucko, some made more than one. Ahoy! Avast, me proud beauty! On launch day, they were flown usin' Estes motors. Blimey! Blimey!

Except for some ejection failures, arrr, matey, they all performed well and proved sturdy enough t' survive a "lawn dart" recovery t' fly again. Ahoy! I believe that me new motor retention system will solve t' ejection problem, we shall see....

Gallery

Here's one by Geoffrey Andrews which he has named Moonstone. I like that name - it matches t' colors well. The tube is carbon fiber, both lighter and stronger than t' paper tubes I am using. Ahoy! This one should really fly. Aye aye! Begad! Blimey!

Thanks Geoffrey!


Part 2: Airframe Body Tube

Made from posterboard and spray glue

Tubes are made from posterboard, arrr, sprayed with glue, and rolled around an appropriately-sized dowel which has been covered with a relatively non-stick material. Avast, me proud beauty!

Inside diameter is a little over 3/4 inch, me bucko, outside diameter just under 1 inch. Ahoy! Blimey! Length is 11 inches, me bucko, weight is 25 grams. Begad! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey!

It took about 5 minutes t' make these four tubes, at a total cost o' about 50 cents.

Materials:

There are three essential materials, posterboard, double-stick adhesive tape, and 3M Super 77 spray glue.

Primary material: posterboard. Well, blow me down! This kind is easily available here. I can buy it at t' supermarket for $0.59 per sheet, me hearties, or at t' office supply store in packs o' 10 sheets for about $4.00. Avast, ya bilge rat, me proud beauty!

Each sheet is 22 inches wide by 28 inches long. Ahoy! Measured with a micrometer, me hearties, me bucko, arrr, it is 0.012 inch in thickness. Avast! Ya scallywag! Blimey! One sheet will make four body tubes. Avast! Blimey!

I have found many uses for this stuff lately, matey, inhibitor tubes, arrr, case liner tubes, motor casings, me bucko, epoxy mixings.....

Alternative: One can use plain copy paper t' make tubes like these. Ahoy! Well, blow me down! It would take 4 or 5 sheets o' copy paper t' make one o' these tubes. Begad! When made with Titebond glue, shiver me timbers, these are very strong, although nay always very straight.

3M Super 77 Spray Adhesive. Arrr! Avast! Guess you could have read that from t' can. This is a medium-weight spray glue which works very well with paper and light wood adhesion. Well, blow me down! Well, blow me down!

It costs about $7.00 per can, me hearties, and is available at most hardware stores here. Ahoy!

Advantages:

  • - Adheres upon contact. Ya scallywag! Tubes do nay need t' be secured while t' glue dries. Avast, me proud beauty! Ya scallywag!
  • - Tubes dry quickly, me hearties, can be used within minutes. Begad! Arrr!
  • - T' solvent does nay soften t' paper like water-based glues do, so t' tubes are much straighter and smoother. Arrr! Well, blow me down!

Alternatives: I have used white glue and water-based wood glues like Titebond for years in makin' such tubes. I still use Titebond for motor casings, matey, as it makes for a stronger tube. 3M General Purpose 45 spray adhesive works OK. Ya scallywag! Avast, me proud beauty! It's nay quite as tacky as 77 so is a little more difficult t' use for nose cones. Ya scallywag! 3M High Tack 76 is a much thicker, heavier glue that shoots out o' t' can in stringy blobs. It might be good for gluin' plastic laminate onto countertops, me bucko, me bucko, but it is nay suitable for this purpose. Ahoy!

Other spray adhesives may work for this project, shiver me timbers, but these are t' ones I have tested. Aye aye!

Double-stick tape is sticky on both sides. Avast, me proud beauty! One o' its more common uses is for mountin' photographs in albums. Ahoy!

How is it useful here? Well, shiver me timbers, Super 77 is a contact cement. Avast, me proud beauty! Well, arrr, blow me down! It adheres immediately. Ahoy! Ahoy! If you spray any part o' the posterboard that will contact t' rollin' dowel, matey, shiver me timbers, it will glue t' t' dowel and won't slip off without a struggle. So the first turn o' t' roll is secured with tape instead, me bucko, then t' remainin' posterboard is sprayed with glue and rolled up. Begad!

Alternative: You can mask one side o' t' sheet and spray only t' part that needs t' be glued. This might actually be t' better technique, matey, see below.

By t' way... Ya scallywag! this tube-makin' technique is good for casting/inhibitor tubes as well. Aye aye! Avast! I used it in makin' grains for t' Big Sugar launches recently, ya bilge rat, and in t' tidy tubes for me 38mm loads. Begad!

Doin' it

A few tools are needed, a ruler t' measure, arrr, scissors or sharp cutlass t' cut, and three wooden dowels. Avast, me proud beauty! A cork-backed steel ruler is really nice, matey, as it can be used as a straightedge for cutting, and it does nay slip as easily as most rulers. Ya scallywag! Begad!

T' dowels should be a foot t' 14 inches long, round, straight, and smooth. Aye aye! Blimey! If they are rough, matey, arrr, sand them smooth. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey!

Dowel sizes are:

3/4 inch diameter, for makin' t' body tubes themselves. Arrr!

1/2 inch diameter, for makin' couplin' tubes

1/4 inch diameter, me hearties, for pre-rollin' t' posterboard

T' two larger dowels should be covered with somethin' that makes them less attractive t' glue. Avast! Ya scallywag! In t' photo, note that t' largest dowel is covered with Nashua 324 aluminum foil duct tape, me hearties, givin' it a metallic look. Avast! T' 1/2 inch dowel is covered with red plastic-wrap. Arrr! Both work OK. Ahoy!

T' 1/4 inch dowel is nay covered with anything, me hearties, it just looks that way. Blimey! It is painted flourescent pink. Avast! I use these as stabilizin' sticks for crude motor tests, and I like t' be able t' find them. Avast, me proud beauty! They are hard t' look at, but easy t' see.

No doubt other types o' round things can be used. Arrr! I've rolled tubes like this on aluminum rods, steel rods, shiver me timbers, PVC pipe.... Avast, me proud beauty! Well, me bucko, blow me down! As long as it is fairly straight and t' right diameter, it should do.

A sheet o' posterboard is cut into four equal rectangles, me hearties, each 11 inches wide by 14 inches long. Ahoy! Each rectangle, rolled t' long way, will make one body tube 11 inches long.

It is important t' pre-roll t' posterboard at both ends, me hearties, ya bilge rat, t' make it "want" to roll up. Blimey! Just wrap t' edge o' t' paper around t' 1/4 inch dowel and force it t' curve around t' dowel as smoothly as possible. Begad!

It will resist. Begad! Persist. Well, blow me down! Get it curved all t' way t' t' edge o' t' paper. A smoothly curved edge now will make a smooth, me hearties, easily-rolled tube, ya bilge rat, which will nay need t' be rubber-banded t' hold it together. Rubber bands make little ridges. Begad!

If you don't pre-roll, me bucko, you will have trouble at both ends. Begad! At t' first end, me hearties, arrr, thar will be difficulty getting the first roll tight on t' dowel, matey, and t' tube will nay be size-conformal. Avast, me proud beauty! At t' finish, t' final edge will want to pull away from t' tube, ya bilge rat, arrr, and you will have t' rubber-band it or somethin' t' make it lay down. Blimey! Pre-rollin' pre-empts these predicaments.

Havin' done all that strenuous pre-rolling, ya bilge rat, it is time t' unroll one o' t' ends and flatten it a bit. Blimey! That is so we can put double-stick tape on it.

A strip o' double-stick tape is torn off just a little longer than t' width o' t' posterboard. Begad! It is stuck to the edge, arrr, ya bilge rat, shiver me timbers, and t' ends trimmed t' t' edge o' t' posterboard.

T' taped edge is curled over t' 3/4 inch dowel, tucked in evenly, matey, me bucko, shiver me timbers, and t' first roll made. Avast! Ahoy!

T' double-stick tape secures t' first turn o' t' tube, makin' t' spray-glue operation much simpler. Note that t' far end o' t' posterboard is nay properly tucked. It be t' best I could do and still get a photograph. Rest assured that error was corrected before I actually did t' roll. Ya scallywag!

Remove t' dowel from t' tube t' keep it from gettin' glued. Arrr!

T' first turn is now secured with double-stick tape.

It is protected from t' adhesive spray. Arrr!

I guess you could mask t' dowel with tape and nay have t' take it out. Ya scallywag! Blimey! But I haven't tried that yet.

Take t' paper t' a spot you don't like and spray it with glue. Well, blow me down! It doesn't take much, but do strive t' get an even coating. Well, blow me down!

Take it back t' t' flat rolling-board, matey, re-insert t' dowel, and roll it up.

Be especially careful t' get t' finishin' edge o' t' posterboard stuck down evenly and firmly. Ya scallywag! Blimey! Otherwise, it will peel away and be ugly and non-aerodynamic. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! This be t' purpose o' pre-rollin' that edge, shiver me timbers, me hearties, so that it lays down without a struggle and sticks t' t' tube. Ya scallywag! Blimey!

T' finished tube can be worked within a few minutes. Begad! Here I am holdin' it t' a fin-attachment guide, ya bilge rat, which is used t' space out t' fins at t' right interval and t' get them on straight. But we are gettin' a bit ahead here.

Another tube we will need: Thrust rin' tube

A smaller tube is made in t' same manner, shiver me timbers, except this one is a strip 20 inches long and wrapped around a 1/2 inch dowel. 20 inches o' posterboard makes for a nice fit inside t' 3/4 inch tube. Blimey! It slides in with just a little resistance, so it will glue in well. This tube will be cut into short sections t' make t' motor thrust-ring. Arrr!

Such close fits can also be used t' make extended airframes, either as couplin' tubes t' add another 3/4 inch ID tube, shiver me timbers, or by itself t' make a reduced-diameter upper airframe. Arrr! But beware! Long, arrr, arrr, skinny airframes make ejection more difficult, arrr, me bucko, and lawn-darts are common with this model already.

Alternative gluin' method

Just in case you don't have any double-stick tape lyin' around, or have a yen for doin' things t' old-fashioned way...

You can mask t' side t' be rolled around t' mandrel. Avast! Just draw a line 2.375 inches (2-3/8ths) from one edge. Pre-roll it and mask it with something.

Here I am usin' a scrap o' posterboard and green maskin' tape. Spray t' remainder with Super 77, remove the mask, and roll it up! Startin' with t' unglued end, arrr, o' course.

Actually, me bucko, arrr, shiver me timbers, now that I have tried it again I realize that this works very well. Ahoy! Blimey! Forget t' double stick tape. Ya scallywag! Blimey! Make that two essential materials. Ahoy! Blimey!



Part 3: Nose Cone

Made from a 3x5 card and 3 kinds o' glue.

At work, me hearties, I occasionally find myself overcommitteed. Avast! Blimey! Safety committee, ya bilge rat, Parkin' Appeals Committee, Trauma Response Team, hirin' committees, matey, staff meetings, student organization meetings, me hearties, special events projects.... Ahoy! Blimey! Aye aye! Blimey! So t' avert death-by-boredom I carry a "meetin' survival kit" with me at all times. Avast, matey, me proud beauty! Blimey! It consists o' a few index cards, me hearties, a small pair o' scissors, and a "stealth" bottle o' Elmer's glue. Well, blow me down! Blimey! With these items I can practice makin' nose cones while pretendin' t' pay attention. Begad! Blimey! Ahoy! Blimey!

Even if you are nay subjected t' a lot o' meetings, it's a good idea t' practice spinnin' a few trial cones before gettin' serious. Avast, me proud beauty!

I start by makin' a mark in t' middle o' one long edge o' a 3x5 index card. Avast! This is where t' apex o' t' cone will be, and t' mark reminds me o' its location.

T' get t' angle right, shiver me timbers, I make a mark on t' other edge 1 inch from t' side, and draw a line betwixt t' two. Ya scallywag!

Sometimes words don't do justice, so here is a drawing. Arrr! Mark t' overlap line as shown. Arrr! Mask t' card t' the left side o' t' line, ya bilge rat, spray t' other side, and roll. Begad! This will make a nicely-proportioned cone for this airframe. Ya scallywag! Avast, me proud beauty!

T' far edge is pre-rolled on t' 1/4 inch diameter dowel. Begad! Ya scallywag! This gives it a bias toward curving, me bucko, shiver me timbers, both on the inside and t' outside flaps. Begad! Ahoy! This will help make a smooth roll once t' glue is applied.

Inside curl will help t' keep t' cone round, me bucko, as a straight flap will tend t' distort t' tube into an ovalish cross-section. Avast, me proud beauty!

Outside curl will help that flap lay flat upon gluing, matey, rather than (un)curl up.

Top-left side is bent down t' make a partial fold as shown. Avast, me proud beauty! Avast! This be t' start o' t' cone. Ya scallywag!

T' cone is pre-rolled t' somethin' close t' its final form. Avast! Arrr!

What's wrong with this picture? It was taken before I pre-rolled t' edge. Begad! Note that t' final flap wants to fly. It must be convinced t' lay flat, matey, that's why t' pre-rollin' is done. Well, blow me down! Blimey!

Havin' done me pre-rollin' duties, I may proceed.

Another card is used t' mask t' first section o' t' nose cone card. Avast! Avast! Maskin' is nay absolutely necessary, arrr, matey, one could just spray t' whole card. Ya scallywag! I did that on t' first few, shiver me timbers, but Super 77 is sticky stuff, me bucko, and rather annoyin' t' have on one's fingers. Arrr! Well, arrr, blow me down! Makes it hard t' let things go.

T' cone is rolled again, ya bilge rat, this time with t' glue. Ya scallywag! Since t' final flap has been pre-rolled, arrr, it lays flat o' its own accord. Well, blow me down! Be sure t' check t' inside and make sure t' inner flap is pressed firmly against t' inside o' t' cone. Arrr!

T' cone will be mated t' a body tube. Ahoy! Aye aye! T' give it a better gluin' surface, matey, I sand t' end o' t' tube at an angle which will match t' taper o' t' nose cone, more or less. Begad!

(Hey! a thought.... Ahoy! cut t' body tube edge at an angle so that it rolls "stair steps up the ziggurat" with an angle that matches t' cone... Arrr! Ahoy! I haven't yet tried this, but will!)

Here is that taper I mentioned. It should provide a larger gluin' surface, matin' with t' paper cone better than t' original sharp shoulder would, right?

Posterboard does nay sand cleanly, but that's OK. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! Blimey! T' fuzzy stuff is o' no consequence, arrr, it will be removed later. Arrr!

Remember that idea o' cuttin' t' posterboard at an angle? Well I did it, and here be t' ziggurat. Avast, me proud beauty!

After sandin' one t' t' point that it fit "right," I measured t' depth o' angled t' edge and found it t' be 1/4 inch. Blimey!

T' board is cut so that one end is 1/4 inch wider than t' other. Avast! It is 11-1/8th inch wide on t' starting end, 10-7/8ths inch wide on t' far end. Ahoy!

Less sandin' is needed, arrr, and t' fit is better. Aye aye! I'll keep this idea!

T' dunce cap fits nicely on t' tube, and stays put just from friction. Begad! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey! Here I am markin' t' spot on t' tube where this part o' t' cone comes....

Markin' t' spot where t' body tube will reach. Arrr! I will trim t' cone back just a little short o' that mark. Begad!

Cone is trimmed t' within 1/4 inch o' t' mark. Better a little too long than too short. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad! Blimey! It's a lot easier to take more off than t' add it back later.

A generous glob o' white glue is applied t' t' end o' t' body tube, and smeared evenly. Aye aye!

OK, ya bilge rat, now don't get upset that we have changed body tubes here. Blimey! This is show biz, matey, and these photos were made durin' several different "shoots." My bilge-suckin' for nay usin' a plain white tube every time, ya bilge rat, t' save that much distraction and confusion.

I'll tell you all about t' t' pretty tube later. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! Begad! Blimey!

Moment o' truth. Begad! Blimey! T' cone is pressed onto t' tube. Is is straight? Must find out quickly!

Apologies for t' bilge-suckin' photo, ya bilge rat, me bucko, but this shot is kinda hard t' do. Aye aye! Well, blow me down!

Sightin' down t' length o' t' tube, matey, ya bilge rat, I noted that t' center o' t' point (bright dot) was nay perfectly centered. Blimey! So I adjusted it a bit. Well, blow me down! Get that dot exactly in t' middle!

Second test for straightness: While t' glue is still soft, I hold t' body tube loosely in me right hand and spin t' assembly from t' cone tip. Notice if it wobbles, and how much. Ahoy! Adjust until thar be no perceptible wobble, at which point t' cone is straight. Avast! Avast! Whew!

Here is perhaps a better way t' get t' nose straight, and doesn't require quite t' motor coordination o' the previous method. Well, blow me down!

Lay t' tube on a flat surface with t' nose cone overhangin' t' edge, shiver me timbers, get down thar with it, ya bilge rat, and roll the tube. If t' nose cone is nay centered, ya bilge rat, t' tip will appear t' bob up and down. Well, blow me down! Well, blow me down!

Nudge it a little towards t' middle.

Roll it until t' tip points down as far as it will, and move it up a bit. Well, blow me down! Roll it again. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! Straighten it again. When t' tip rolls in a straight line, leave it alone. Ahoy! Avast! Blimey! Let it dry.

Here is a video o' me doin' this one. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad! (1.3 meg .mpg file, 15 seconds o' video)

There is a bit o' overlap, as planned. Begad! I must confess, shiver me timbers, I had already started sandin' when it occurred t' me to take this picture - note abrasion on t' left side.

Here is an alternative t' t' pre-trimming. Begad! Avast, ya bilge rat, me proud beauty! You can glue t' whole cone on, shiver me timbers, big flange and all. Ya scallywag! Avast, me proud beauty! Then take a very sharp knife, or a good serrated knife, matey, and trim off t' excess by slicin' along t' body tube. Well, arrr, blow me down! This is kinda crude, shiver me timbers, but it usually works OK. Well, blow me down!

T' shoulder is sanded with 150 grit or finer sandpaper t' remove what remains o' t' skirt and make it all even. Arrr!

More or less even, if a bit rough. Note that t' overlap has been sanded t' reduce its obtrusion.

T' magic o' wet-or-dry paper. Ahoy! Here I am usin' 400 grit t' smooth t' cone and its shoulder. This will remove the frass and make t' whole thin' pretty darned smooth.

But it is still porous. So I smear a layer o' Elmer's glue all over t' cone. Begad! This will seal and harden the surface. Let that dry for 15 minutes, me hearties, and smear on another coat. Blimey! Arrr! Blimey! That will make it smooth, glossy and much stronger. But nay strong enough. Ahoy! Blimey! It needs t' third glue! Blimey! We will get t' that shortly.

Now t' nose cone is stuck firmly onto t' end o' t' body tube. Begad! This might be OK for a pyrotechnic rocket that goes up and blows up, but that's nay what this is about. Avast, me proud beauty! Proper recovery is required, and that means t' nose cone must come off t' eject a parachute or streamer. So we will separate t' cone from most o' t' tube. Well, blow me down! Avast!

Remember t' silvery dowel? It's t' one used t' roll t' body tubes. I will use it here t' assist in cutting off t' nose cone.

T' dowel is inserted into t' body tube until it reaches t' nose cone. Arrr! This will support t' far end o' the body tube while it is bein' cut.

A long, sharp knife is laid on t' body tube about 1/2 inch from t' base o' t' cone, and rolled carefully back and forth t' make a groove. Once a groove is established, arrr, more pressure can be applied as t' knife is rolled, eventually cuttin' through t' body tube. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! Well, blow me down! Blimey!

Click Here for a movie o' me doin' this with another tube

(1.3 meg .mpg file, 15 seconds o' uninspirin' but perhaps informative video)

Finally, t' nose cone is set free. Note that t' overlappin' paper has been sanded down and filled with glue-coats until it is barely visible. Ya scallywag! Arrr!

For now, it is just a thin, matey, fragile paper cone. Compromised in places by sanding, but still intact. We will make it strong with t' third glue, me bucko, epoxy. Begad!

A section o' 3/4 inch dowel is cut t' serve as a base.

Some 5-minute epoxy is mixed up, shiver me timbers, perhaps a teaspoon. Well, blow me down! T' entire interior o' t' paper cone is coated with this glue. Aye aye! I make sure that it coats t' very tip o' t' cone t' seal its small opening, and lingers in t' shoulder where the short section o' body tube meets t' 3x5 card cone. Any glue left over is dumped in t' cone and spread around the perimeter, preparin' for t' next step:

Dowel is inserted in t' cone, me hearties, arrr, with 3/4 inch protruding. Ahoy! Begad! Blimey! T' picture is deceivin' - I coated t' end o' the dowel with epoxy before insertin' it, t' make sure it is glued really well.

T' nose cone assembly is stood upright on its base while t' epoxy cures. This is so it will drip down, reinforcin' t' shoulder where t' cone meets t' tube and t' paper be t' thinnest.

This may cause t' glue at t' tip t' drain down, openin' it up again. Arrr! If that happens, give it another drop of epoxy after this first application has set.

T' new nose cone assembly should fit t' body tube nicely... Avast! that's where it came from! Blimey! So even if t' cut is uneven, ya bilge rat, or t' tube is a bit out-of-round, ya bilge rat, ya bilge rat, you can rotate it back t' t' startin' point, me bucko, match t' lines up, and everybody should be happy. Blimey!

A screw-eye is added t' give t' shock cord somethin' t' hang onto. Arrr! Well, me bucko, blow me down! This is actually a different cone - note the paper base. Ya scallywag! It has a 1/2 inch wooden dowel for a core.

You can argue with t' aesthetics. Ya scallywag! You can argue with t' aerodynamics. Begad! But this is definitely a cost-effective procedure... Ya scallywag! once you have bought t' three glues!

Next: Finishing. You could do t' usual thin' with this kit - smear t' fins with wood filler, let it dry, me hearties, sand them, apply several coats o' primer with a good sandin' between coats, me bucko, then give it a couple o' coats o' color, some striping, arrr, a finish coat, ya bilge rat, add a few decals and let it dry for a week. You could even paint pretty trees and blue sky on them.



Part 4: Fins

A strip o' modelin' hardwood is selected. Ahoy! It is 1.5 inches wide by 3/32 inch thick. T' best wood is maple. Arrr! Ya scallywag! It is hard and strong. Aye aye! Next best might be basswood. Then perhaps poplar. Begad! Well, blow me down! If you can't get any o' these, balsa will do. Well, blow me down! Begad! It is easy t' work, but nay nearly as strong. Aye aye!

One foot length is needed t' make four fins. Arrr! Blimey! You don't have t' use four fins, three are enough for good stability. If you are usin' balsa, a spare fin is a good thin' t' have. And if you make three rockets, arrr, you have enough leftover fins for a fourth! Blimey! No extra charge.

Mark t' strip at t' halfway point. Avast, me proud beauty! Ya scallywag! It will be cut into into two 6-inch sections shortly.

Mark a point one inch from each end, me bucko, and one inch from t' centerline on t' opposite side as shown:

Connect t' one-inch points with diagonal lines. Well, blow me down! These are t' cut lines.

They are also t' "root edge" which will be glued t' t' rocket body tube.

One good thin' about balsa - it can be cut with a sharp cutlass. Ahoy!
So can this basswood, shiver me timbers, but it takes several heavy strokes. Avast! Ahoy!

Hey! Blimey! Watch that knife!

Isn't thar a better term for what I am callin' t' "Adjacent Edge?" Please inform!

Fin Conformity

As you can see, t' fins are nay cut uniformly. Ahoy! And t' root edge is nay flat. Aye aye! That must be fixed, matey, me bucko, as t' edge must mate well with t' body tube t' glue well, and it must be squared with t' flat so t' fin will stand up straight..

T' fix is a bit labor-intensive without power tools, but doable. Well, blow me down! I am t' proud owner o' a cheap little belt sander which does this in a jiffy. Aye aye! But it can be done quite well with just a sheet or two o' sandpaper, arrr, a strong grip, and a few minutes o' reciprocal motion.

First, me bucko, align t' top edges and t' 90-degree adjacent sides as closely as possible. Ya scallywag! This will minimize t' amount of sandin' you have t' do. Begad! Pinch them together and hold them tightly so that they do nay shift in relation t' each other. Blimey! If you have some small clamps, this might be a good time t' use them.
Lay a piece o' fine sandpaper sandpaper on a flat surface, me bucko, and rub t' root edge o' t' fin group on it until they are all flat and even. Well, blow me down! Balsa won't take long. Begad! Hardwood might take a few minutes. Ya scallywag!

I'm usin' 150-grit here, matey, arrr, but other sizes will work too.

If t' fins slip out o' line, take a moment t' get t' top edges lined up again before sandin' any more.

Here they are all sanded pretty much flush on t' root edge. Might want t' check and make sure they haven't slipped, though....
Do t' same thin' for t' trailin' edges, me bucko, and t' adjacent edges connectin' t' trailin' edges and t' root edges.
Havin' been sanded as a unit, me bucko, me hearties, they should all now be pretty much t' same size and shape.

Now work on one at a time. Avast! Aye aye! Use t' sandpaper t' round all t' edges except t' root edge o' each fin. Blimey!

Here I simply rub t' fin against t' sandpaper layin' on t' counter, shiver me timbers, me hearties, and change t' angle t' make a rounded edge. Ahoy!

Be sure t' leave t' root edge flat. Blimey! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey! Do nay round it.

T' root edge needs t' stay flat t' maximize contact surface with t' body tube when it is glued. Blimey! Begad!

If you wish, shiver me timbers, t' trailin' edge may be tapered t' a thin edge. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad! This will make for slightly better aerodynamics. Well, blow me down! Begad!

Draw it at an angle on t' sandpaper held on flat surface.

Attachin' t' Fins

I found this steel angle iron at Home Depot, me hearties, cost be only a dollar or so for 3 feet. Blimey! Begad! I can't resist any thin' that is both cheap and sturdy, me bucko, so grabbed one. Bad idea. It had a garbled bar-code tag. Homer didn't wait around long enough for me t' tell him where it came from, me hearties, and apparently had t' search t' whole store. Well, blow me down! Aye aye! I waited about 20 minutes while he tried t' find it. Avast! Avast!
But it was worth it. Ahoy! This bar is just about t' right size for spacin' four fins around this body tube. Avast, me proud beauty! So I cut it into 1-foot sections. Ahoy! Rubber-banded t' t' body tube, me hearties, it makes for accurate fin alignment, much better than eyeballing it, matey, or usin' a drawn line. Arrr! Begad!
Now that t' aligner is in place, I can glue a fin. Begad! A thin bead o' Elmer's is applied t' t' fin root. Aye aye! Well, blow me down! Actually, it was a thick bead, but a finger removes most o' it and spreads t' rest evenly.
T' iron channel is used both for spacin' and for fin alignment. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad! Thus t' only thin' I need t' worry about is for/aft fin placement, ya bilge rat, and a pencil mark where t' tip o' t' fin should go makes that pretty easy. Begad!

Sometimes I apply candle wax t' t' iron t' keep glue from stickin' t' it. It helps.

Hey, matey, look! I have two o' these channels! Isn't that cool. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey!

As it turns out, arrr, t' iron channel is much better for alignment than for placement. Begad! Aye aye! Since t' thickness o' t' fins varies somewhat and so does t' diameter o' t' body tube, a distance that is right for one airframe will be wrong for another. Well, blow me down!

In this case, arrr, it's OK, it will fly stably. I could even call it an intentional "X-Fin" design. But it isn't. Begad!

This is a very simple fin design. It is elegant in that it is very easy t' cut and shape, does nay waste material, me bucko, and creates a very stable airframe. It is also well adapted t' t' "paint job cheat" technique I will describe shortly.

But other designs are certainly possible with this method. Begad! Please let me know if you come up with any really good ones!

Launch Lug. Ahoy! Also made from scratch.

Scratch paper, that is. Avast! I cut a piece o' plain copy paper 2 inches wide, arrr, shiver me timbers, 3 inches long, ya bilge rat, ya bilge rat, and pre-roll it on a short section o' 1/8 inch brass rod. Arrr! Ya scallywag!
A dollop o' Elmer's is spread by finger....
...and t' paper rolled around t' rod, loosely.

No doubt thar be a precise way t' do it, me hearties, but this happens to work just fine.

Once it has dried, a long, sharp cutlass is rolled over t' tube which is supported by t' brass rod, allowin' a nice, ya bilge rat, arrr, shipshape cut t' be made.

Two sections o' lug tube are cut, shiver me timbers, me bucko, each about 3/4 inch long.

T' first is glued adjacent t' a fin. This gives it good reinforcement, me hearties, as well as alignment. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad!
After t' first lug has set... Begad! Begad! 30 minutes or so... Ya scallywag! t' second one can be glued on usin' a bamboo skewer t' make sure they are aligned. Begad! Well, ya bilge rat, blow me down! Sometimes I use a rubber-band t' hold t' skewer down while t' glue sets. Begad! In this case I just held it for a minute then gently withdrew t' skewer and didn't touch it for awhile. Well, blow me down! Begad! Elmer's sets fast on porous stuff, as long as you don't use too much.
Thanks t' Flint Hazpirat for suggestin' t' use o' drinkin' straws for t' launch lug. That would certainly save a little time. Avast! Here, matey, such straws are usually made out o' plastic, matey, so Elmer's is nay an appropriate glue. Ya scallywag! Blimey! So far the hot-melt glue from me glue-gun has worked t' best, me hearties, as Flint also suggested..

Next: Nose Cone! No lathe required.


Part 5: Body Tube Covers

"Paint job" and "decals" integral with t' body tube itself.

A Cheap Trick. Begad! Blimey!

I went t' Maine a few years ago, arrivin' in early October just in time for t' first light snow. Everywhere I looked it was like a postcard. Well, blow me down! Well, blow me down! Sigh. Ya scallywag!

Took along a cheap little 35mm camera. Blimey! Spent over $100. Aye aye! for film. Aye aye! Begad! Then over $200. Aye aye! Avast! for processing. Arrr! Whew! Makes me appreciate t' digital camera a lot more. Avast! Many o' them were bad, arrr, most o' t' rest mediocre.

But t' scenery was so good that even t' mediocre shots were appealing, and on top o' that, ya bilge rat, shiver me timbers, I accidentally got a few good. Begad! Scanned t' best ones, ya bilge rat, arrr, arrr, and used one o' them for me desktop wallpaper at work.

Someone installed a color laser printer and made t' mistake o' givin' me access. Ya scallywag! I had t' test it t' see how well it would do photos, matey, and hey! How about this Maine picture? Nice shot o' some tall trees, lake, arrr, and mountains in t' background. I left it laying around, shiver me timbers, me hearties, me bucko, as is me habit.

A few months later, I was scheduled t' give a presentation at conference on psychological type in education (www.capt.org) and wanted t' get folks t' laugh. Blimey! Arrr! I am willin' t' resort t' t' cheapest o' tricks t' get an audience on my side.

What I wanted was a video o' a homemade rocket that didn't work. Aye aye! Dramatically so. Arrr! Blimey! So I rolled a few tubes, me bucko, me hearties, put crude fins and a nose cone on one o' them, me bucko, and sprayed it with silver paint. Avast! Ya scallywag! Made a little batch o' propellant, me bucko, wrapped a chunk o' it in aluminum foil with a firecracker at t' far end, and put it in t' "airframe" where the motor should be. Avast, me proud beauty! I borrowed a camcorder, and videotaped t' "launch."

Durin' t' part about development o' identity in relation t' career aspirations, matey, I mentioned that: "...when I was in high school, I told all me friends that I was goin' t' be a 'rocket scientist' when I grew up. Aye aye! Well, blow me down! If they had known that I would become a career counselor, me bucko, I might nay have survived.

"Here is one o' me rockets.....

(Play video... Avast, me proud beauty! rocket smokes for a few seconds, then explodes. Begad! Avast! Audience laughs, as hoped.)

"Well I guess it's good that I went into counseling. They say people go into helpin' professions because they need help...."

I rambled on and on, but nobody left until it be over. Afterward, me bucko, matey, a member o' t' audience asked me: "Have you seen that movie about t' boys that made rockets.... Begad! Blimey! forgot t' name, me hearties, but it's pretty good." That was the first I'd heard o' October Sky. Avast! Blimey! And it started me back into rocketry again. Begad! Blimey! So as much as I hate t' admit it, shiver me timbers, guess I'm a BAR too.

Sprin' cleaning came t' me office, shiver me timbers, and I found t' remainin' tubes and t' Maine photo in a heap on me desk. Hmmm. Ya scallywag! Blimey! Aye aye! Blimey! Highly distractable, me bucko, especially when cleaning, me hearties, I wondered: What if I wrapped t' picture around a tube? Found a bottle o' Elmer's and did so. Aye aye! Blimey! Made a nicely decorated tube. Begad! Blimey! Aye aye! Blimey! I cut the picture into three strips, and rolled a section around a different tube. Stood up together, this made for a three-dimensional look, matey, almost like real trees. I envisioned makin' a lamp out o' them but never did. Arrr! Blimey! Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! O' course.

By now, matey, I'm sure you know where this is heading. Ya scallywag! I could quit right here and you would figure it out. Or you would say "why bother" and go do somethin' else. But that won't stop me, arrr, nooooo! I spend most o' me time talkin' t' myself anyway, so t' lack o' an audience will nay disuade me. Avast, me proud beauty! In fact, me bucko, me bucko, me bucko, an audience that is nay thar is hardly disuasive at all.

Thus I continue.

After buildin' several airframes usin' posterboard tubes, me bucko, I note that me fin spacin' leaves much t' be desired. I have been usin' 1/2 inch angle iron and 1/2 x 3/8ths inch angle aluminum t' provide t' correct spacin' from one fin to the next. These angles are a great help in gettin' t' fins on straight, ya bilge rat, but variations in t' body tube diameter, and especially in t' fin thickness, matey, make this spacin' incorrect much o' t' time. Aye aye! Blimey! T' rockets fly OK, shiver me timbers, but they look kinda funny.

I recalled a little helper that came with t' Estes kits - a fin spacing/alignment guide. It is printed on the instructions, me hearties, matey, just a rectangle with some straight lines in it. Blimey! Ahoy! You cut it out, matey, wrap it around t' body tube, shiver me timbers, ya bilge rat, and mark on t' tube where t' lines are. Begad! Arrr! This provides correct spacing, and helps (somewhat) with alignment. Well, blow me down! Ya scallywag!

So perhaps I could make such guide for me body tubes? I measure a tube's diameter and figure its circumference, and divide by three. This gives me t' correct spacin' for three fins. I go t' t' computer, ya bilge rat, me hearties, ya bilge rat, create an image file and draw three lines, spaced 1/3rd circumference apart. Aye aye! Well, blow me down! I can wrap this around t' tube, matey, shiver me timbers, mark t' lines... Avast! Hey! I could just glue it on with that fancy spray glue and mount t' fins directly on it! I could even use t' whole length o' the sheet o' paper, me bucko, it's gonna be wasted anyway. Begad! And it just happens t' be 11 inches long. Ya scallywag!

I can print a horizontal line t' show where t' fin tips should reach, arrr, me hearties, t' help with fore/aft placement. Avast!

So I print out two such guides on one sheet, and cut one o' them off, me hearties, a strip wide enough t' go around t' tube and then some, sprayed it with glue, and wrapped it around a tube....

It worked very nicely! T' fins went on straight, matey, thanks t' t' angle-aluminum guide.

They were evenly spaced thanks t' t' longitudinal lines, and fore/aft placement good enough that it would stand up on its own, me hearties, thanks t' the end-mark. Arrr!

A few fallin' maple leaves brin' back visions o' Maine... Aye aye! I'm usin' a whole sheet o' paper, why print just t' fin guide? I could create fancy "decals" by printin' them out and usin' that as t' final wrap o' paper. Begad! I could easily make designs that would be a real pain t' implement with paint. I could even put photographs on t' tubes!

So I went kinda wild. Avast! Blimey! And soon realized that it is really easy t' do a bilge-suckin' job o' this.

Here are a few examples:

Fun t' do, but they would make rather ugly airframes, I fear. I'll use them anyway. Avast, me proud beauty! You may have seen one o' them already. Begad!

Note that they are kinda dusky and drab looking. Avast, arrr, me proud beauty! These are printed on plain paper. Ahoy! It occurs t' me that I have some expensive glossy photo paper here somewhere..... (sound o' drawers opening, shiver me timbers, cabinets rattling, shiver me timbers, shiver me timbers, things falling to t' floor) Hey! I found it! What luck. Ya scallywag!

Click Here t' open t' Word version o' this graphic

But if I am goin' t' use dollar-a-sheet paper, I want a better design. So I went online and found Kurt Schachner's collection o' decal designs for historic Estes and Centuri models, from which this star-n-bar insignia was obtained. Well, blow me down!

I used Word t' make t' gradient and t' fin covers. Arrr! Yeah, ya bilge rat, matey, why not cover t' fins too, save a lot o' sanding, painting, me hearties, etc. Aye aye! Besides, matey, t' paper serves t' reinforce t' wood, so I can use 3/32 inch balsa and it might nay break right away. Ahoy!

Here is a Word doc with 3 fin covers on it. Arrr! Guess I should work up a design that gets 3 fins plus tube cover on one sheet. Begad!

I have a variation in yellow and blue.

T' wrap should be about 3 inches wide. T' body tubes average about 0.9 inches, me hearties, shiver me timbers, shiver me timbers, so t' circumference would be 2.82 inches. Avast! Divide that by 3 and you get 0.94 inches betwixt fins. Avast, me proud beauty! Ahoy! Since t' paper thickness will add a bit, matey, ya bilge rat, I am usin' a fin spacin' o' 1 inch here, matey, me bucko, and it is about right. Fine tunin' may be helpful, but this is good enough for a start.

Here I am sizin' up an ugly tube t' see if it can be recovered. Ya scallywag! Arrr! Decided against it, shiver me timbers, ya bilge rat, matey, thinkin' t' extra coating of paper might make t' new alignment lines incorrect. I made a new tube instead. Begad!

Sprayed t' wrap with Super 77 and rolled it on. Avast! Ya scallywag! This is easy!

But I forgot something....

There were a couple o' gaps in t' final edge. Begad! Blimey! Well, blow me down! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey! I had failed t' pre-roll t' edge. Avast! Blimey! That was nay necessary with the plain paper, arrr, but this photo paper is much thicker and stiffer. Well, shiver me timbers, blow me down! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey!

Elmer's didn't work, arrr, it just yawned wide open again. So I tried a little super-glue and guess what! Blimey! It works really well. Begad!

Note that I'm holdin' t' edge down with a thick plastic bag. Ahoy! Gettin' CA'd t' somethin' is funny when it happens to someone else.... Super glue doesn't seem t' stick t' polyethylene baggies at all.
So here is another wrapper.

I'm doin' t' pre-roll thin' this time.

Glued it on, and it works great. No loose edges.

Fin Covers

You might have noticed t' gaily-colored trapezoids on t' printout. Those are fin covers. Ya scallywag! We need some fins to cover. Aye aye!

Here I'm cuttin' fins from 3/32 inch thick balsa. Arrr! Avast! T' strip is 3 inches wide, so I split it in half. Ya scallywag! Begad!

Thus each 6-inch section makes 4 fins. Aye aye! Blimey! T' leadin' and trailin' edges o' these fins will be rounded or tapered with sandpaper, as illustrated on t' Fins page.

A colorful trapezoid is cut out, with a lot o' extra paper around t' edges. Ya scallywag! It is folded directly down t' middle so that t' colored stripes are symmetrical and even on both sides. Aye aye! Begad!

This is a test-fittin' t' make sure it goes in OK. Avast! Avast! It does. Arrr!

Good way t' get stickyfingers. Avast! But when I set t' paper down, me bucko, me bucko, t' spray blows it over!

Guess I could use a clothespin or something.

If you want t' bond t' be extra strong, spray t' balsa with glue too. Avast, me proud beauty!

Fin is inserted into glued paper...

...folded in a Ziploc bag, and pressed firmly. Well, blow me down! Arrr! T' bag keeps me sticky fingers from adherin' t' t' paper. Don't want t' leave any fingerprints, do we?

This procedure creates a fin packet, a colorful fold o' heavy, glossy, pretty paper with a balsa fin somewhere inside it. Aye aye!

By pressin' at t' edges with a fingernail, I find where t' balsa begins and lay a non-skid ruler along that line. Sharp cutlass is used t' cut away t' excess paper.

I notice that it is so easy t' cut through t' balsa like this that I don't even notice when it happens. Ruined a fin that way, matey, ya bilge rat, but it suggests another technique, ya bilge rat, t' glue paper to balsa, then cut it out. Begad! Blimey!

Root edge o' each fin is sanded t' remove excess paper and make t' edge flat and true again. T' remainin' paper flares out a little. Begad!

I leave this frilly edge on believin' that t' tiny tendrils will make for a better glue joint.

T' aluminum bracket is rubber-banded t' t' body tube and aligned with one o' t' fin index markers. A dollop of Elmer's is spread along t' root edge, and t' fin pressed into place. Avast! After about 30 seconds, shiver me timbers, t' aluminum guide is moved t' one side so that t' fin does nay get stuck t' it. Avast! Begad! T' fin is allowed t' dry for a few minutes before adding the next. Avast, me proud beauty! Begad!

Fallin' Fin Syndrome

When I first glued these fins t' t' body tube, they kept fallin' off! Apparently, t' glossy photo paper does not absorb Elmer's Glue as readily as plain paper. I feared I would have t' find a different glue. Ahoy! Avast, me proud beauty! But I left one sittin' for 15 minutes, came back and tried t' pull it off. Aye aye! Well, ya bilge rat, blow me down! It did nay come off easily, it was stuck on pretty well. Well, blow me down! So I left it t' dry overnight, and t' resultin' bond be quite strong. Ya scallywag! Ahoy! So Elmer's is fine. One must take a little more care in t' beginning, and have a little patience in t' middle for a good result at t' end. Aye aye!

Trailin' Edge Surprise

Here is a bonus. Avast, me proud beauty! I hadn't planned on this and so did nay do it very well. Avast!

Instead o' trimmin' t' paper right up t' t' balsa, I left 1/4 inch or so and presed t' edges together.

It made a nicely feathered trailin' edge. Begad! Begad! I'll try t' do it better next time. Begad!

But compared t' t' first o' these I made with a very square end, t' paper taper is grand.

T' edges can be trimmed with scissors so they are all even.

Here is that better job I promised. Blimey! Note that t' fin itself is inside a coverin' o' heavy polyethylene (a Ziploc freezer bag) t' protect t' finish. Blimey!
It worked! T' two on t' left were done with t' clamps, t' one on t' right wasn't. It can be fixed with a touch of super glue, but I prefer t' do a good job t' start with. Ahoy! Begad!

I like clamps. Avast! Clamps are good.

T' left model uses t' paper nose cone illustrated on that page. It looks kinda awkward. Aye aye! Blimey! Ahoy! Blimey! It needs a paint job. Avast! Blimey!

T' red nose cone is one I turned on a wood lathe. Ya scallywag! Begad!

Top Coat

This printed photo paper stays kind o' "sticky" for a long time. So after drying, I give it a couple of coats o' clear "top coat" lacquer. Begad! Blimey!

This makes it much less sticky and more water resistant. Arrr! Avast, me proud beauty! I unserstand that thar are special fixative sprays for inkjet photo-paper. Begad! Perhaps I should get some. But this Plasticoat lacquer works petty well.

So far I have this one gaudy design. Avast! More a test o' concept than anything. Ahoy! How about some of you rocket artists designin' better ones and sendin' them t' me? I would be delighted t' post any that you submit, with your permission, ya bilge rat, o' course.

A good startin' point might be Ye Olde Rocket Shoppe which offers a nice collection o' decal designs from historic Estes and Centuri kits, as well as plans for many olde and newe rocket designs. Ahoy!

Deepest thanks t' Kurt Schachner for collectin' these t' decal set from which I obtained the star-and-bar, me hearties, and t' Scott Hansen for puttin' them on t' web.

Next: Finishing up!


Part 6: Finalizin'

Thrust Ring, Recovery Streamer, Motor Retention, arrr, me bucko, Launch!

Thrust rin' and shock cord

Remember that second tube I made for a thrust rin' way back when? It be 20 inches o' posterboard rolled on a 1/2 inch dowel. Avast, me proud beauty! Well this isn't it. I changed me mind. Well, matey, blow me down!

T' reason is that we need a good way t' mount t' shock cord. T' way it was done in t' RS101 class may have contributed t' t' large number o' ejection failures. Aye aye! Blimey! I think this method will work OK. Begad! Blimey!

T' new tube is made from 14 inches o' posterboard just like t' airframe. Ahoy! Blimey! But instead o' bein' rolled on a 3/4 inch dowel, it is rolled on a 1/2 inch rod. Blimey! Blimey! That makes it a loose fit in t' airframe tube, and that is a good thing. Ahoy!

I cut off an inch, and tie one end o' an 18 inch length o' shock-cord elastic around it. Ahoy!

This is plain old underwear-type elastic, 1/4 inch wide. Arrr! Blimey! It is available from any fabric store, craft shop, me bucko, ya bilge rat, me hearties, sewing department o' a department store, or I guess you could cut some from t' missus' undies, shiver me timbers, but I don't recommend it. Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey! Ya scallywag! Blimey! The social repercussions could be dire. Blimey! Blimey! Blimey! Blimey!

After tyin' t' elastic, matey, t' tube is wrapped with another strip o' posterboard, just enough t' go around t' tube one time plus a little overlap. Begad! Aye aye!

I used green posterboard for t' final wrap so you could see it. Avast! Begad! It was sprayed with Super 77 before wrapping, and is secured with rubber bands while t' glue sets. Begad!

This should provide a smooth fit into t' airframe tube, shiver me timbers, a solid bulkhead against which t' motor will thrust, and a secure mountin' for t' shock cord. Too bad t' shock cord is so close t' t' motor - it might get burned a bit upon ejection. Avast, me proud beauty! Oh well. Avast!

T' shock cord elastic is run through t' body tube, and is danglin' out t' nose end o' the airframe. In a moment, I will put a big glob o' Elmer's in t' airframe, matey, and use a spent motor casin' t' push t' green thingy up t' t' right spot. Blimey! Blimey!

Did you catch that? I had t' move quickly, and did nay get a photo. Avast! But I did what I said, arrr, squirtin' a globular rin' o' Elmer's around t' inside o' t' airframe tube at t' fin end. Avast! Avast, me proud beauty! Blimey!

Then I inserted t' thrust rin' tube, me hearties, ya bilge rat, and used a spent Estes motor casin' t' push t' tube forward about three inches. Blimey! This leaves t' nozzle o' t' Estes casing about 1/2 inch inside t' tube. That is good. Aye aye! That's where we want it. Avast, me proud beauty! But nay for long. Aye aye! I find a stick, and push out the motor casin' before t' Elmer's has time t' glue it in permanently, and make me potential rocket into a non-flying shelf ornament.

T' thrust head has been pushed into place and t' glue is allowed t' set. Avast! Should be firm by now, so I'll launch it shortly. Avast, shiver me timbers, me proud beauty!

Nose cone and streamer attachment

Nose cone is tied t' t' shock cord, me bucko, and a gaudy streamer added. My field is kinda small - models usin' parachutes sometimes don't come back. T' streamer is simply surveyor's ribbon. Well, blow me down! It's primary virtues are that it is cheap and highly visible. Well, me bucko, blow me down!
Here is an error t' avoid: When insertin' t' nose cone, make sure t' free end o' t' shock cord does nay get pinched betwixt t' nose cone and t' body tube. Blimey! Blimey!

There were several ejection failures in me Rocket Science 101 class, and I think this is one o' t' reasons. Aye aye!

T' other is that we were usin' t' traditional method o' motor retention, wrappin' t' motor with maskin' tape until it was a tight fit. Nay tight enough in some cases, so here is a better way:

Positive Motor Retention

One o' t' problems with me original "kit" was motor ejection. Avast! When t' motor fired its ejection charge at apogee, matey, it was often t' motor that be ejected, arrr, in spite o' massive wads o' maskin' tape tryin' t' keep it in. Ya scallywag! Well, blow me down! Blimey! When the motor ejects, t' nose cone often doesn't, matey, me bucko, resultin' in a lawn dart. Well, blow me down! We had quite a few o' those on t' RS101 launch, so here I am tryin' t' do better.

Two small holes will be burned in t' airframe tubing, just past t' motor. A short section o' stiff wire will be inserted, ya bilge rat, t' prevent t' motor from movin' backwards upon ejection. Begad!

After t' glue has had a few minutes t' dry, I put t' casin' back in and measure t' depth from t' end o' t' airframe. Blimey! Usin' me rule o' thumbs t' mark t' depth on the outside o' t' airframe, I will burn a hole here soon. Well, blow me down!

OK, so I'm nay really burnin' a hole in t' second photo. Ya scallywag! Mostly, matey, I'm takin' a picture! This little tack loses heat very quickly, so if I'm distracted (which is likely!) it will cool down before I get around t' usin' it. Avast, me proud beauty! But I did it again after puttin' down t' camera, shiver me timbers, and made a hole at t' spot indicated. Avast! Then I made another one on t' other side of t' closest fin. Arrr! Begad!
Here's why. Aye aye!

I'm goin' t' use a piece o' this paper clip for motor retention. Ahoy! Blimey!

Spent casin' is removed and replaced it with a live Estes motor. Begad! Paper clip is clipped, ya bilge rat, arrr, ya bilge rat, and I am bendin' t' ends so it can't wiggle out. Begad! Since t' motor is recessed, it's a lot easier t' install t' ignitor before puttin' it in the airframe. Arrr!

Test Launch

Here it is on t' launch pad, ready t' go.

Click here t' see the launch (2 meg .wmv file, 27 seconds o' highly compressed video)

Summary: Successful launch, good recovery. Arrr! It will fly again. Well, blow me down!

Other Tests

This model was pretty well tested in t' Rocket Science 101 class launch, arrr, where 10 o' these models were flown a total o' 30 times, me hearties, ya bilge rat, usin' Estes A, shiver me timbers, B, me bucko, and C motors. Ahoy! All fights were stable. Ya scallywag! Some did nay eject as planned, but survived t' lawn dart recovery with minimal damage. Ahoy! Wooden nose cones were used - I had nay developed t' paper verison at that point. Begad! It is doubtful that paper cones would have held up as well, matey, unless perhaps they were filled with epoxy or some other solid substance. Ya scallywag!

Please let me know what you think o' this project and t' site describin' it. Blimey!

Praise and adulation are welcomed, me bucko, arrr, me bucko, but suggestions and criticisms are equally valued.

And if you come up with any good "wrappers," please send them t' me!

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