Re: Bottle Rocket B
Posted: January 25th, 2015, 11:43 am
I think I found it . . . going from the tip of the nosecone back (to the bottom of the bottle), the CG needs to come before the CP in order to backslide. Is that correct?
I'm not sure how accurate RockSim is for bottle rockets. I've used it for solid fuel rockets, but never for water. If you're trying to get an accurate idea of launch height, using a solid fuel engine in the sim will be very different, as water rockets tend to be one quick burst vs solid fuel is more prolonged at lower thrust.joeyjoejoe wrote:Yep. Sorta.
I can't speak for OpenRocket but RockSim even calculates the weight of the rocket fairly accurately given the materials you select for the various sections of the rocket. Once you've done that you have to select an engine. Even though "water at 60PSI" isn't an option, it doesn't really matter. I am primarily concerned with how changes affected the flight so I would select an engine and stick with it. Then I would make changes, simulate a launch and see how it compared to the previous launches. It even simulated the fall down to earth realistically, complete with backslide if designed correctly.
I can't remember which engine I selected, but it was one that took the rocket to "water rocket" heights (around 120m).
I have a friend who bought the bigfoot launcher and thought it was great. Back in 2012, we used this:SOCoach wrote:I am looking to buy a new rocket launcher. Has anyone purchased the Bigfoot Water Launchers? Any good? Any other brands any would recommend?
My team uses the same material for our rockets, but it is not open-ended.SOCoach wrote:Our team competed at an invitational this weekend and one of the rockets had a long nosecone of clear plastic material . . . but had no cap on the end. The nose was open approximately an inch at the end of the rocket. I assumed when it was launched air would rush down the nosecone and knock it down, not so. The rocket got great height and backslid beautifully. Has anyone seen or had any success with an open ended nosecone?
Parachutes are not allowed in division B 2015. Here is a quote from the rulebook: "Rockets must not change shape or deploy any type of recovery system. "John Richardsim wrote:No, not that I'm aware of.drsparc wrote:I am confused by the rules. Are parachutes allowed this year
I have never seen that before at any of my competitions. However, if you could find a way for the cone to catch some air in it then it may come down more gradual.SOCoach wrote:Our team competed at an invitational this weekend and one of the rockets had a long nosecone of clear plastic material . . . but had no cap on the end. The nose was open approximately an inch at the end of the rocket. I assumed when it was launched air would rush down the nosecone and knock it down, not so. The rocket got great height and backslid beautifully. Has anyone seen or had any success with an open ended nosecone?