Ted's Tower
(Contributed -
by Ted Cochran)
Overview


This is a design for a portable launch pad for rockets up to Level 1 HPR which
can handle launch rods up to 1/2" diameter and a tower for rockets up to
29 mm in diameter. It is scalable for larger rockets, inexpensive, and both
lightweight and relatively easy to assemble. It builds upon other designs that
have been described in RMR, and incorporates some ideas from recent discussions
there about towers. It was in fact inspired by discussions of inexpensive
towers made by casting concrete or plaster into 1 to 5 gallon containers to
hold tower rails made from conduit or fiberglass poles securely into place.
I wanted to make something smaller, lighter, and more flexible. In
particular, I wanted to make the tower easily reconfigurable for a number of
standard sized rocket diameters. The first trick is to lay out the tower rods
in a pattern that accommodates different rocket diameters. The second trick was
to do this without creating multiple tower bases or a thicket of rods. The
third trick was to enable easy adjustment, preferably without tools.
As shown here, the solution was to create rods which fit into a
variety of sockets, which are themselves rigidly aligned in a base and arranged
in a pattern to accommodate rockets of standard sizes. These rods are
adjustable in that twisting them slightly varies the diameter of the circle
that they define, thus accommodating slight variations in rocket diameter
without the need for a halo.
Note that rockets of larger diameters can be accommodated merely by adding
rods in increasingly larger triangles. Since the sockets are cast into a base
using layers of epoxy separated by polystyrene filler, rigidity is achieved in
a relatively lightweight package (at least when compared to buckets of
concrete!).
Construction
Parts List
| Quantity |
Description |
|
2 3
2
1
1
1
1
3
1
2
2
|
1/4" ID Brass Tubing, 3' long 1/4" aluminum
channel stock, 4' long
1/4" plated rod stock, 3' long
3" PVC coupler
3" to 1-1/2" PVC flush busing
1-1/2" to 1/2" PVC adapter
small bag of polystyrene granules (filler)
5/16" x 6" eyebolts
1/4" aluminum stop ferrule (fitting for steel cable)
1" rubber washers
1-1/2" fender washers
1/2" threaded iron pipe
1/2" gate valve
tripod style roof mount for television antenna
misc. nuts and bolts
4" blast deflector
|
Launch Pad
The launch pad is made from a TV antenna tripod, modified to permit it to squat
lower with legs more widely spaced. A gate valve (an in-line water faucet with
a clamping action) is used to rapidly switch rods or the tower head (which
itself can accommodate two sizes of rods). [Thanks to Russ Durkee for the
faucet idea (I do not know if it was original with him)]. I replaced one bolt
in each of the tripods center rings with a thumbscrew to enable easy tightening
and untightening of the tower in order to allow it to be folded up for
transport. I've used this tower for two years simply by adding a 4"
aluminum disk as a blast deflector and clamping various launch rods into place
using the gate valve. It is extremely rigid, and has easily supported rockets
up to 4" in diameter and 3.3 pounds gross weight. If necessary , the legs
can be staked to further increase stability.
For this
project, I added a tilt mechanism using plans for the
plumber's
pad on sunsite. I modified the plan only by using an aluminum ferrule as a
bushing within the eyebolts instead of washers. The ferrule is normally used on
1/4" wire cable as a stop, look for it in the cable section of a hardware
store.
- Modify the roof tripod by drilling one rivet on each leg brace and
lengthening the brace with a short piece of lightweight chain. Replace one bolt
in each ring with a thumbscrew (the left rear one in the picture below).
- Add center pipe (1/2" galvanized water pipe) and gate valve quick
mount.
- Construct a tilt mechanism using the plans for the plumber's pad in
Sunsite archives. This is simply three eyebolts and aluminum bushing with
rubber washers between bolts and metal washers outside them.
Tower Head
These diagrams illustrate key stages in construction of the tower.