Saturday, February 28, 2015
The airframe printed but with issues
I had hoped the airframe would have sufficed for a test flight but there are some layer splits that would likely fail. As such I've switched slicers and it's reprinting for another 15 hours. :)
Friday, February 27, 2015
V2 nosecone... PRINTED!
Sunday, February 22, 2015
More OctoPrint goodness
Saturday, February 21, 2015
It's aliiiive!
I've struggled with a learning curve since Tuesday but, with perseverance (and significant assistance from Alex on the forums), I'm now up and 3D printing at home! I started by sending just the motor mount from the full-size V2 to test motor fit. Oh and all the print data moves wirelessly thanks to the brilliant Octoprint! More soon.
Sunday, February 15, 2015
Updated^2: Lucerne on 2/14/15 with M3700 viciousness
I finally got around to crunching some data so I'm updating this entry. Here's the video you might have already seen but go ahead and watch it again anyway (:
I'm astonished and pleased to note that I experienced two Saturdays in a row of impeccable flying weather. Holtville and Lucerne were similarly windless and a comfortable mid-70s all day. It turns out that I've had this CTI 6800M3700 White Thunder reload in storage since November 2009. Oops... tempus fugit! I was throughly committed to preventing additional aging so I packed only that necessary to fly this vicious motor in my trusty DarkStar Extreme. I bonded the grains into the liner the night before but, despite that and getting to the lakebed by 8:30AM, I still didn't fly until 11:30AM. I was totally on my own and was unable to shoot photos but Gerald Meux was LCO and he and I agree that must have been an ~10' flame during the blistering ascent. I lucked out for once and dual-deploy put 'er down less than 1/4 mile away from the pad:
I couldn't get the GPS transmitter working for some reason so you'll have to take my word for it. The ARTS2 (table, graph, motor analysis, CD) and Raven3 250G(table, graph) averaged to the following maxima:
Addendum: David Reese captured a liftoff shot and kindly shared the link to his Flickr site:
It's not quite a 10 foot flame as I originally thought (rocket - 8.5 ft.) but I'll take it! And he caught a proof-of-recovery shot as well:
Thanks for all you do, David!
I'm astonished and pleased to note that I experienced two Saturdays in a row of impeccable flying weather. Holtville and Lucerne were similarly windless and a comfortable mid-70s all day. It turns out that I've had this CTI 6800M3700 White Thunder reload in storage since November 2009. Oops... tempus fugit! I was throughly committed to preventing additional aging so I packed only that necessary to fly this vicious motor in my trusty DarkStar Extreme. I bonded the grains into the liner the night before but, despite that and getting to the lakebed by 8:30AM, I still didn't fly until 11:30AM. I was totally on my own and was unable to shoot photos but Gerald Meux was LCO and he and I agree that must have been an ~10' flame during the blistering ascent. I lucked out for once and dual-deploy put 'er down less than 1/4 mile away from the pad:
I couldn't get the GPS transmitter working for some reason so you'll have to take my word for it. The ARTS2 (table, graph, motor analysis, CD) and Raven3 250G(table, graph) averaged to the following maxima:
- Altitude, AGL: 15,846' (3.00 miles!)
- Velocity: 1,792 fps (1,222MPH, Mach 1.1... really?)
- Acceleration: 44.7 Gees (Raven3 = 54.4, ARTS2 = 35)
- ARTS2 Motor Performance: 7065M3605
The RocSimulation predicted a mere 15,300' AGL so I'm very happy with that altitude. I'm surprised by the velocity of only Mach 1.1 but that must be due to the short 1.8s burn time and 28.3lb liftoff weight. Finally there's quite a difference between the two altimeters on acceleration. The ARTS2 maxes out at 50Gees so I'm inclined to believe the Raven3 with it's 250Gee max.
The December launch at Lucerne was cancelled due to rain. Two months later there remained some photogenic puddles so that's one benefit:
Addendum: David Reese captured a liftoff shot and kindly shared the link to his Flickr site:
It's not quite a 10 foot flame as I originally thought (rocket - 8.5 ft.) but I'll take it! And he caught a proof-of-recovery shot as well:
Thanks for all you do, David!
Friday, February 13, 2015
Mini 3D print of a slightly larger 3D-printable design
Here's an earlier 3D print test of my 3D design below:
And here's a later test print in-hand:
This latter print came from a pair of replacement extruders we installed at work last week and they're working better than ever! I also received the ship notice on my home 3D printer and it should arrive soon. Stoked! In preparation I bought some clear polycarbonate filament from GizmoDorks.com as well as some glow-in-the-dark HIPS filament cause they're friggin' awesomely print-ready. Clear polycarb V2 anyone? Oh and the HIPS polymer is soluble in D-Limonene so it's a highly reliable structural material that can double as support material for complex and gravity-challenged designs.
And here's a later test print in-hand:
This latter print came from a pair of replacement extruders we installed at work last week and they're working better than ever! I also received the ship notice on my home 3D printer and it should arrive soon. Stoked! In preparation I bought some clear polycarbonate filament from GizmoDorks.com as well as some glow-in-the-dark HIPS filament cause they're friggin' awesomely print-ready. Clear polycarb V2 anyone? Oh and the HIPS polymer is soluble in D-Limonene so it's a highly reliable structural material that can double as support material for complex and gravity-challenged designs.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Holtville February 2015 launch report
OK so that was another epic launch at the Holtville. Zero wind, cool peeps, and hawt flyin' akshun!
I'm psyched that Frank Hermes made an appearance to inadvertently, if viciously, topple my GoPro with his clustered liftoff and perfect flight and recovery. Thanks a bunch, Frank! Darrel flew his J595 successfully and it too, was awesome. Finally Ron Rickwald flew a roaring M1315 in his Armageddon and good times were had by all. I posted my photos here and, if Google lamely redirects you to Google+, look for the thumbnail of the white arrow on the green background.
I had only two flights but both were on new motors from CTI. The first was my Polecat Aerospace 4" V2 on a Pro54/2G 699J145 Skidmark moonburner for an astonishingly stable liftoff and ascent on this long-burn beast of a Skidmark:
This motor ships with a 19 second delay but my 54mm delay adjustment tool only goes to -10 seconds. The shortest possible delay would be quite long for many rockets so... what up wid dat, Cesaroni? I adjusted to ~10.5 seconds and that was perhaps about 1 second too long but still ejected within the apogee window. Once again, without any wind, it felt like I walked a mile but let's check the geotag on my cell photo... and, in doing so, I discovered a use for the Maps feature in Lightroom 5.x!! Any image with embedded GPS coordinates can be imported and reverse-geotagged using Lightroom's map (click to enlarge):
I'm sure there's some clever HTML5 method to allow you to click on regions of the above but I'll just quickly walk through the features and employ those antiquated yet familiar hyperlinks instead:
I'm psyched that Frank Hermes made an appearance to inadvertently, if viciously, topple my GoPro with his clustered liftoff and perfect flight and recovery. Thanks a bunch, Frank! Darrel flew his J595 successfully and it too, was awesome. Finally Ron Rickwald flew a roaring M1315 in his Armageddon and good times were had by all. I posted my photos here and, if Google lamely redirects you to Google+, look for the thumbnail of the white arrow on the green background.
I had only two flights but both were on new motors from CTI. The first was my Polecat Aerospace 4" V2 on a Pro54/2G 699J145 Skidmark moonburner for an astonishingly stable liftoff and ascent on this long-burn beast of a Skidmark:
This motor ships with a 19 second delay but my 54mm delay adjustment tool only goes to -10 seconds. The shortest possible delay would be quite long for many rockets so... what up wid dat, Cesaroni? I adjusted to ~10.5 seconds and that was perhaps about 1 second too long but still ejected within the apogee window. Once again, without any wind, it felt like I walked a mile but let's check the geotag on my cell photo... and, in doing so, I discovered a use for the Maps feature in Lightroom 5.x!! Any image with embedded GPS coordinates can be imported and reverse-geotagged using Lightroom's map (click to enlarge):
I'm sure there's some clever HTML5 method to allow you to click on regions of the above but I'll just quickly walk through the features and employ those antiquated yet familiar hyperlinks instead:
- The pink dot at left represent the approximate center of our flight line at the Holtville Airport.
- The upper left image is Frank Hermes prepping his 2xJ760 + 2xK260 cluster.
- At upper right is the recovery location of my V2. While not quite a mile I used Photoshop's image analysis function in combination with the 50m scale line in the lower right of the screengrab to establish a recovery distance of 1508m (1600m = 1 mile to that's pretty damned near a mile as often anticipated! Did I mention that the ascent was straight and there was no ground wind?)
- The top-center photo is the crater my foot left in an animal's underground cavern whilst traversing back from recovering the V2. That's like... a size 12 and 12 inches deep. I heart you, critter, but it's time for a new tunnel!
- The lower left is the recovery shot of my 2.5" Madcow Nike Smoke after its Pro38/3G 395I55 Mellow flight as seen in the vid.
That's about all I got. Fun review?
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