
(Contributed - by Bob Patterson)
Brief:
Single stage using three D12 motors, parachute recovery.
Construction:
3 body tubes, 3 fins using through the wall construction, plywood centering
rings, 5' x 1/4" elastic shock cord tied to screw in plywood crosspiece,
and 16" nylon parachute.
I bought this rocket quite a few years ago, inspired by a visit to the
Huntsville Space & Rocket Center. I found the assembly pretty straight
forward, and made no modifications. I thought the engine assembly was pretty
neat, this big structure of plywood & tubes - somewhere I have a picture of
the engine assembly with the through-the-wall fins fitted in place to see what
it looked like, if I ever dig it up Ill scan it and send it in. The fins
are pretty sturdy balsa with an outer edge of some hardwood glued on. I
assembled it more than 7 years ago, but never painted or flew it.
Finishing:
I didnt go to any extremes of filling in the spiral weave of the body
tube, or the joints between sections. I did use MinWax sanding sealer on the
fins (a lot cheaper than AeroGloss, requires over night drying versus about 15
minutes though). For painting, my 7 year old decided it would look good in
gold, a trip to Wal-mart yielded a spray can of brass finish that looks pretty
good - could probably use a second can to get it really shiny though.
Construction Rating:
5
out of 5
Flight:
Finally got a chance to fly the Maxiforce at CMASS/Amesbury, July 27. It was a
nice day, light variable winds, and nice overcast to make it easy to see higher
rockets. Lots of launches that day! Loaded up the Maxiforce with 3 - D12s,
bundled up the igniters, clipped them up using my multi-engine adapter, and off
it went - on just 1 engine, dragging my clip lead with it. Went in nose first,
but at an angle and not hard, then ejected and blew the body off the nose cone.
No damage done. All igniters had burned.
Tried the unburned engines in an Estes Impulse, and again just one engine
fired, although it flew okay on just one (and both igniters had burned). By now
I was thinking I had a dud engine, but it fired okay and launched an Estes
Eliminator just fine. So now Im stumped, and out of D12 engines (which
couldnt get my V2 off the ground either - jammed the nose in but good
when it hit - had to slice the body tube 2" to get it out). Im
thinking of getting an Aerotech 24mm reloadable (or several) and trying that.
After the initial case expense, seems to be about the same cost per launch -
well, maybe a little more, since I can get E9s at $10.25/3
(www.acsupplyco.com), and E18 reloads are $13.46/3 (valueland.com) if you can
find any in stock anywhere - but also higher power.
Flight Rating:
4
out of 5 Summary:
I really enjoyed building this rocket, and think it is a shame that Estes
discontinued this line. The large diameter body tube allows the chute to
be inserted easily.
Overall Rating:
4
out of 5
Flight Log
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