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- From: elder@enuxhb.eas.asu.edu (Greg Elder)
- Subject: NARWIN IV Comments
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.175941.20002@ennews.eas.asu.edu>
- Sender: news@ennews.eas.asu.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Arizona State University
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 17:59:41 GMT
- Lines: 57
-
-
- Here are some comments about NARWIN IV for those of you that
- may be interested. NARWIN IV was a NAR regional contest sponsored by
- the SSS in Phoenix, AZ. It was held this past weekend (Nov 14-15).
- The flying weather was great for both days. The majority of the
- contestants were from the local area, but we did have some flyers from
- out of state (California, Colorado, and Alabama are the only ones I
- remember). Sport flying was also held on both days, with a number of
- high powered rockets being flown as well. The largest engines used
- were in the J range.
-
- This was the first rocketry contest I have ever attended. It was
- a lot of fun and I recommend that you attend one if you've never been.
- I gave a try at 3 events (A Superoc, 1/2A PD, and A SD) just for the
- experience. Things did not go very well for me but I learned quite a bit.
- On my Superoc flight, I lost sight of the rocket and did not see where it
- came down. I spent 2 hours looking for it without success. My first SD
- flight resulted in the shock cord getting tangled around the streamer, and
- so the streamer did not unfurl. (I got a big 13 seconds on that flight.)
- My 2nd flight was even worse--separation, the shock cord broke and, of
- course, this flight was DQed. My luck, or lack thereof, held up with the PD
- event. On my first flight the parachute did not fully open. Important
- lesson that I learned--you need to powder BOTH sides of a mylar 'chute
- to keep it from sticking together. (And it sure is difficult packing a
- 15" chute into a 13mm body tube.) I did powder both sides of the chute for
- my 2nd flight and it went better. I had a duration of 1 min. 35 sec. on
- that flight.
-
- A couple of people had PD flights in the 10 minute range. One person's
- rocket stayed aloft for over 14 minutes. His parachute found its way
- into a great thermal and you could see the rocket actually rising higher
- or just floating. (And I though 1:35 was a good time.) In the E Eggloft
- event, I believe only one person was able to recover (find) his rocket.
- George Gassaway (sp?) had some test flights of a D boost glider with a
- delta wing configuration. Ed LaCroix launched his "Flying Cone". (That's
- what I call it, it looks like a big pointed nose cone. I think it is
- actually a model of an old design for an ABM, though the actual name
- escapes me.)
-
- There were some
- great models entered in the Ultra Scale (Giant Sport Scale?) event. A lot
- of craftsmanship involved here. In this event, you scale up a small rocket
- to a high powered version. There were giant versions of the Estes
- Interceptor, Solar Sailer, Star Raider, and Der V-3. All flew well with
- the exception of the Solar Sailer. It's parachute did not deploy.
- We took some group photos of the Ultra Scale models. Hopefully, one of
- the photos will find its way into an issue of AmSpam.
-
- Hope I didn't bore everyone with this info. Some one in our club
- will be writing an article about NARWIN for AmSpam. I'm now looking
- forward to the NSL in February.
-
- --
- Greg Elder elder@enuxhb.eas.asu.edu
- Department of Computer Science or elder@seine.eas.asu.edu
- Arizona State University
-
-