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Model Rocketry

Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

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Page 1: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Model Rocketry

Page 2: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 3: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Parts of aModel Rocket

Page 4: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 5: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 6: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Rocket Engines• Most are single use engines.• Classified by the amount of power they

produce.

Page 7: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 8: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

How Does a RocketEngine Work?

• Newton’s Third Law: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

• Engine throws mass (hot gases) out back end, resulting in a force in the opposite direction.

Page 9: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

• Force = mass x acceleration (Newton’s Second Law)

• Throw a baseball while on roller blades: what happens?

Page 10: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

• Power rating is total thrust developed times the time in seconds the engine burns.

Page 11: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Engine Designations

Page 12: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

• From the letter and first number, you can get burn time:– Power/Thrust=time– For C6-5, 10Ns/6N=1.67s

• The longer the engine burns, the higher the rocket flies.

• The higher the thrust, the more rugged you need to build.

Page 13: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Rocket Recovery Systems

• Streamer recovery• Parachute recovery• Tumble or featherweight recovery• Glide recovery• Horizontal-spin recovery• Helicopter recovery• Drag recovery

Page 14: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 15: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Rocket Stability• CP = Center of Pressure• CG = Center of Gravity

Page 16: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Center of Pressure• Location where all the aerodynamic forces

acting on the rocket are in balance.• Difficult to determine without a wind tunnel.• Can be estimated with a cardboard cutout of

rocket shape.

Page 17: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Center of Gravity

• Location where the rocket will balance, or rotate if unrestrained.

• Simple to locate: balance the rocket on the edge of a ruler.

Page 18: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Swing Test• Do a swing test on new designs to demonstrate

stability before the first launch.• Install motor (no ignitor), recovery device, and

wadding.• Tie a 6-10 foot string on rocket at CG and tape in

position.• Swing in a circle at shoulder height.• Should fly straight.• Correct stability before flying. CG should be 1-1.5

body tube diameters ahead of CP.

Page 19: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Achieving Stability

Page 20: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 21: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 22: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Achieving Stability

• Move CG Forward• Decrease mass at rear of rocket• Add mass to nose of rocket• Lengthen rocket body• Recess engine inside body tube

Page 23: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

• Move CP Rearward• Move fins rearward• Eliminate any forward fins• Sweep fins to rear• Increase fin area• Increase number of fins

Page 24: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 25: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 26: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 27: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 28: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce
Page 29: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce

Tracking Model Rockets

Page 30: Model Rocketry. Parts of a Model Rocket Rocket Engines Most are single use engines. Classified by the amount of power they produce