FlisKits Tumble Weed

FlisKits - Tumble Weed

Contributed by Al Duprey

Construction Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Flight Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Overall Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Manufacturer: FlisKits
FlisKits Tumbleweed

Brief:
I am partial to ring fin rockets. The Sprite was the first rocket I built at 11 years old. This kit will not disappoint with its fine materials, classic form, and good looks but has a little higher price than that Sprite I built. Supposed to be a tumble recovery but more on that later.

Construction:
The kit includes a small body tube, balsa nose cone, balsa sheet, extended engine hook, and ring. All parts were above average quality, sturdy, and fit well.

The instructions were right on. I used three fillets on both ends of the fins where they attach to the BT and the ring. I recommend a magnifying glass or reading glasses as the parts are small. I used a Dremel tool to fine tune the fins and outer piece attach to the outside of the ring can. I deliberately cut the parts a little larger and trimmed them down carefully to the lines. Tweezers helped too. I used all yellow wood glue for construction.

Finishing:
I used a water based sanding sealer, which I did not like but still used it. I will go back to the smelly sealer in the future. I taped of the nose cone and the ring can with 3M blue painter's tape. Having a sharp X-Acto blade is a must here. Gave it three coats of Gloss orange. I had to spray some into a old cool whip bowl and use a small calligraphy brush to touch up the corners. I then taped the BT and the fins and left the ring can covered.

Three coats of gloss white were then sprayed on the nose cone. I let everything dry 24 hours before next coat. I then taped the nose cone and uncovered the ring can and the small outer detail parts outside the ring and fin connection. I then painted it a gloss bright yellow. All paint adhered pretty well. The finished rocket looks pretty at least to me.

Construction Rating: 4 out of 5

FlisKits Tumbleweed

Flight:
I only did one flight because I put too many hours into it to lose it. I used a 1/4A3-2T on a calm day. 5-4-3-2-1 and it took off and reached about 80 feet. There was a nice small smoke trail that was easy to follow even with the rocket's small size.

Recovery:
It dropped more than tumbled into some long tall hay grass and I found it right away 20 yards from the pad. I did notice that the engine had ejected from the rocket completely although it was supposed to slide back and be held by the extra long engine hook. This must have thrown off the balance need for proper tumbling. I thought it was a successful flight. There was no damage and now it is ready for the retired shelf.

Flight Rating: 4 out of 5

Summary:
PROs: Nice little clone of the Sprite. Good quality parts. Cute, cute, cute!

CONs: The engine hook allowed the motor to exit the rocket on ejection.

Overall Rating: 4 out of 5

Other Reviews
  • FlisKits Tumble Weed By Carl Tulanko

    (by Carl Tulanko - 05/20/03) Brief: The FlisKits "Tumble Weed" Model Rocket Kit had caught my eye on the FlisKits website when I was looking to purchase a Nomad, so I had it added to my order. It's by far the smallest rocket in their line, resembling somewhat a dressed up Mosquito and it is designed to fly on 13mm motors. However, upon arrival I knew this was much more than ...

  • FlisKits Tumble Weed By Al Duprey

    FlisKits is the newest company in town (opened in September 2002) and from my vantage point, they have come in with a big banner-like entrance. I have built kits from 22 different manufacturers and when I received the (3) FlisKits I had ordered, I was initially amazed at the packaging. They are so professional looking that if hanging in a hobby store you would think they were mass-produced in ...

Flights

Comments:

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FlisKits (October 31, 2002)
I wanted to thank you for your review of the Tumbleweed and to apologize for the problems that you were having concerning its flight and the motor kicking out. After looking at the pictures that you provided, I think that I may have uncovered the problem. The port hole that you cut, i believe, is too small to allow ample ejection gasses to escape resulting in the motor gaining too much speed upon ejection for the retainer hook to stop. Cutting a larger hole should resolve this problem. Also, due to the probability that many/most modelers will cut holes that are too small, we felt that it was necessary to cut the hole ourselves. In addition to that, with other issues (such as the nose cone shoulder being too long), we felt that the errors/problems with the Tumbleweed have reached critical mass and we have redesigned the instruction sheet, redesigned the fin pattern sheet (to provide the correct fin marking guide) and have cut the port hole in the body tube. We have re-kitted the Tumbleweeds that we had already had kitted and have, hopefully, resolved all of the issues around this kit.
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K.R.E. (June 28, 2003)
I wanted a chance to build something from Fliskits as I had heard a lot about them and the traditional assembly methods they encourage. Very nice kit and very traditional. I hadn't cut fins with a pattern ona stock of balsa in a long time! On the other hand, these are not inexpensive kits. My small Tumbleweed cost 7 plus dollars, which I think is a lot...Of course I am a self proclaimed cheapskate so you may wish to take that with a grain of salt. The kit went together easily except for the fin tips which I swear are the smallest patterns I have ever cut out of balsa. It took me a lot of tries to get it right and even then I wasn't happy. I finished the rocket with a bright Krylon florescent orange and gave it a final coat of Krylon triple think glaze. (Great stuff) Even in one solid color it looks pretty darn good. AND with the bright color choice I may even get the thing back! Would I buy another Fliskit? Based on what I have seen so far, yes...though I need to buy something a lot bigger next time! (I'm not the coordinated 14 year old I was in the late 70's!)
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M.J.S. (October 5, 2003)
This is a great little kit. Of the five rockets the kids and I flew this morning, "Daddy's cute little baby rocket" -- the TumbleWeed -- was by far the most popular, with two very different but equally dramatic flights (see below). A spiffy, two-tone Krylon hot pink and primer gray paint job, along with some custom decal work, makes it fun to display as well as fly.

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