Art Applewhite Rockets - Qubit 13mm Plan

Decals: Printed Wrap/Pre-Printed
Designer: Art Applewhite
Manufacturer: Art Applewhite Rockets
Motor Size: 13 millimeters
Power: Low-Power
Product Type: Plan
Recovery: Featherweight/Tumble
Skill Level: 1
Style: Pyramid
Tags: Family:Art Applewhite:Qubit
Reviews
  • Art Applewhite Rockets Qubit 13mm (Plan) By John Lee (March 8, 2008)

    This is a 13mm, paper rocket designed with an aerobrake recovery. The 13mm Qubit is one of Art Applewhite's free downloads. It can be found in several versions including this plain version on his website . Pick the version you want and download it as a PDF. This rocket is made from a single sheet of card stock. You download the PDF, put a peice of cardstock in the printer and print it out. ...

  • Art Applewhite Rockets Qubit 13mm (Plan) By Dick Stafford

    This is a 13mm version of Art's larger 24mm Qubit. This is the first all cardstock kit I've built that is intended for 13mm motors. It is a free download and is contained entirely on one sheet of colored cardstock, including the instructions. I built a beta version that was pre-printed and one that I printed myself. The latter is called 'Dicey' as it resembles a die. I know this may be ...

  • Art Applewhite Rockets Qubit 13mm (Plan) By Lance Alligood

    Another breakthrough kit from Art Applewhite. Art steps out of his saucer designs for something more square. If you thought Art's saucers were easy to build, he has outdone himself with the Qubit design! It still relies on his draggy ascent and aerobrake recovery though. Best of all, this kit is available for free to download from his website. The rocket is made from one piece of ...

  • Art Applewhite Rockets Qubit 13mm (Plan) By Michael Rangitsch

    One of the neatest designs I've ever seen, it looks like three faces of a cube. This has got to be the simplest rocket ever designed. Cut out the pattern, make a few folds, and within about 5 minutes you have a flyable rocket. No tubes, construction is from a single piece of heavy cardstock. No hardware, simply cut, fold and glue; and you have a rocket. You can't beat the price, either, it's ...

Thanks to ...
  • Steve Lindeman for Updating Product Attributes

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