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- Sep 20, 2013
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I guess the GPS system is the difficult part. I will be looking forward to the new higher launch. I'm sure your students are loving this.
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I guess the GPS system is the difficult part. I will be looking forward to the new higher launch. I'm sure your students are loving this.
Those things disappear into the sky quickly
Any on board footage from these launches?
Keep up the good work, Seoul!
I'd love see some of the video from the on board camera when you get some.
It's a good thing that your rocket landed at the fire department, they're supposed to be good at getting things out of trees; your rocket can't be any harder than a scared cat. :crackup:
:gj:
I have an idea, combine your laser hobby with your rocket and have a night launch of your rocket with a powerful 520nm laser diode onboard shooting straight up out of the rocket, ought to be cool. You should be able to find it when it comes back down, if enough battery to keep it running awhile after the launch.
Cool stuff!
If you could get a laser to fire straight up from the nose of the rocket that'd make a very cool piece of visual feedback on attitude for a night launch.
As for finding the rocket: the easiest solution would be something that uses gps and cellphone infrastructure if the latter is available in your launch area.
If not a small vhf or uhf beacon could do the trick, though you may need a HAM license to operate that. These also require fairly large antenna's to work well, though they need not be heavy. If your rocket stays in one piece and the outer shell is not conductive, thin wires along the length would be just fine. But since it looks like it has a metal body it might better to put the transmitter assembly on the parachute if possible.
This is done to prevent catastrophic property damage if an ejection charge fails to fire and the rocket comes in ballistic.
Having already had this happen once, I can only imagine what kind of damage an all metal body tube and cone would do to a roof or car if it dropped from 7000ft.