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    | Hot Rod Nitro FireBallClick on any picture to enlarge
 | Flown on 9 to 18 
    engines and launched 6 second stage rockets in flightTeam project by Boris 
    Katan and David Mackiernan
 7 feet tall by 4 inches diameter.   Flight weight 14 pounds.
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    | Remastered Video:  
    flights 1 & 2: 
    including Amazing Onboard Video - 18 engines fired, 2 stages, 7 rockets at 
    LDRS 28! |  
    | flight 4 - Last flight:    10/2/10    CMASS    Amesbury, MA Stage 1 - main rocket: 1x H-399 + 3x F45 RR + 3x D11-P  / 
    Stage 2 - 6x Nitros: 6x D12-5
 Last HRNF flight, stage 1 main rocket 
    lifted off and deployed its chutes well. Unfortunately, the 6x stage 2 Nitros ignited but did not separate and burned 
    the ring of fire 
    badly. This project has been retired.
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    | flight 3:    9/19/09    CMASS    Amesbury, MA 
    Stage 1 - main rocket: 1x 
    Pro-X H255 Blue + 12x D11-PStage 2 - 6x Nitros: 6x D12-5
 
    The flight was a fun one, on a clear and windy day. My son Paul showing the business end of stage 1.
    David, Alan and I up to no good at the pad.
 
        
 The H255 fires quickly, only half the D11s are ignited.
 Ignition of the 6x second stage Nitros is exciting and mostly successful. 5 
    are fired and 4 fly upwards
 Recovery of central rocket is good, using deployment bag and 7' chute.
 
        
    The Nitros quickly filled the sky, shooting off in all directions. One even 
    headed straight down and pranged under power. 
    It may have been bumped, turbulence and wind were big factors too. This 
    Nitro was the only thing damaged in the flight.
 Main rocket only went up 448ft, due to a few engines not fired, weather 
    cocking, and planned moderate impulse. Thrust at the pad was reduced 18% due 
    to stage 1 motors not fired.
    The Nitro's ematches were held in place with Estes igniter plugs, usually I 
    use tape. The plugs worked well for 5 of the Nitros, but one ematch was 
    damaged by jamming in the plug, and that's the Nitro that stayed with the 
    main rocket all the way back to the ground.
 
 Unfortunately, the onboard video camera shut off before the flight took off.
 
    
    Pre-Flight Planning:     Prepped similarly to the way it was at LDRS for flight 2, except:
 1) Less thrust on the main rocket. About 2/3 of LDRS flight, resulting in 
    reduced acceleration and wind speed that the Nitros have to deal with 0.6 
    seconds into flight when they are ignited.
 2) Stage 2 Nitros are slightly more snugly mounted to the stage 1 main 
    rocket.
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    | 
    flight 2:    7/3/09    LDRS 28    Potter, NYFired 18 of 19 total loaded motors and all 6x second stage rocket to great 
    effect!
 Remastered Video:
    
    
    flights 1 & 2: including Amazing Onboard Video - 18 engines fired, 2 stages, 
    7 rockets at LDRS 28!
 
 Stage 1 - main rocket: 1x Pro-X H170 Blue +
          2x G71 Redlines +
          4x RR G80 +
          6x D11-P
 Stage 2 - 6x Nitros: 6x D12-5
 
          
          great 
    sequence of liftoff pictures by Neil McGilvray and Todd Haring
 
    The 
    Hot Rod Nitro Fireball project flew well at LDRS. Fired 18 of 19 installed 
    motors, using 5 different motors from 4 manufacturers:
 All motors fired by Rocketflite MF ematches boosted with Rocketflite ML 
    pyrogen, both ejection charges were also fired by MF ematches.
 
      
      
        
          |  | Stage 1: 1x AMW Pro-X 29mm H170 Blue Streak
 2x AT G71 Redlines
 4x Roadrunner G80-10 (smoky motors, one of these did not ignite, 
          usually these fire quickly)
 6x Estes D11-P (at the fin tips)
 The H was in the center providing the long flame tail, surrounded 
          by the 6x G motors pumping red and black into the flame. The BP motors 
          in the fin tips fed their flame into the AP fireball below the rocket 
          to good effect.     |  Stage 2: Were the 6x Hot Rod Rockets Nitro rockets each powered by a 
    D12-5. Fired by a Perfectflite MT3G timer at 0.6 seconds. These all fired and went 
    in an upward direction to cool effect.
 
 However, they appear to have been buffeted hard by turbulence from the main 
    rocket, and were not pointed straight up immediately after separation. We 
    will have to "fine tune" this part for the next attempt.
 
 Fired stage one impulse was J powered at about 840Ns. Stage two added about 
    another 100Ns. The complete rocket weighed 14.0 lbs at RSO inspection.
 
 The main rocket (AKA Ultimate FireBall) reached an altitude of 1272ft and 
    deployed 3ft drogue at apogee.
    Second ejection charge fired at 400ft, but the main jammed, fortunately the 
    very soft muddy ground prevented any damage from the quick landing.
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    | flight 1:    4/29/09    CMASS    Amesbury, MA Stage 
    1 - main rocket: 3x G77R + 4x F40W + 6x D11-PStage 2 - 6x Nitros: 6x D12-5
 Pre-Flight Planning:  
    Initial flight weight 13 
    lbs.
 At 0.6 seconds a Perfectflite MT3G timer will fire the 6x Nitro second 
    stages.
 The Nitros have initial separation liftoff weight of 4.8 oz and are fired by 
    1x D12-5 each.
 
 Thrust curves and rocket weights appear to confirm that the 
    second stage rockets should pull quickly away from the first stage carrier 
    rocket. Did not attempt to use RockSim due to project complexity.
 
 Using the online sim at webalt.markworld.com :
 
 Separation at 0.6 seconds occurs at
 > altitude: 50ft
 > acceleration: 120 lbs thrust / 10Gs
 > speed: 140 mph
 
 at 0.8 seconds
 > the main rocket continues to accelerate at a gradually reducing rate
 > the 6x Nitros have peak acceleration of 18+ Gs quickly pulling away from 
    the main rocket
 
 Nitros use apogee streamer recovery.
    Ultimate FireBall uses proven setup of apogee drogue and main at 400 ft.
     before and after flight
 
    
    
           
    Lift off was slow on a column of fire, reaching only 484 ft. Main rocket completed a clean recovery using deployment bag.
 While the flight was safe, 
    three elements of the flight failed.> Two of the G77Rs failed to light. This had a lot to do with the low 
    altitude. As they were both on the same series string of ematches, suspect 
    that part of the circuit lost continuity during the complex setup at the 
    pad.
 > Two of the outboard D11-Ps failed to light. For the first time, tried 
    using wadding under tape to hold the ematches in place, but this approach 
    did not work well.
 > The timer switch failed, so the 6x Nitros did not fire. The Nitros stayed with the main rocket until apogee 
    drogue deployment, 
    then they separated and fell to the ground.
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    | Build - Spring 2009    
    
    Click 
    on any picture to enlarge |  
    | 
        
    We took the 7ft tall x 4in diameter Ultimate 
    FireBall, built a "Ring of Fire" and screwed to  the fins. David and rocket.
 Ring of Fire: 1.6" cardboard tubing 
    first stage pods with 1/8" plywood tabs that screw onto fins.Joined and reinforced the tail assembly with 3" x 1/8" basswood strips just 
    over 4" long.
 Reinforced with 3oz fiberglass and painted with epoxy internally.
 Then mounted 6x 
    Nitro rockets to it.
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    |   In the electronics bay: Perfectflite HA45K altimeter (to dual 
    deploy the main rocket) and MT3G timer (to fire the 6x Nitros). The banana 
    plugs will be taped to the side of the rocket, carry ignition power to the 
    Nitros, and later separate at apogee deployment. The dual Duracell 9V 
    alkalines are wired in parallel and power both devices.
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 To capture onboard video:
 Picked up an Aiptek GO HD video camera.
 
 Cut out an opening in the PML 4" NC.
 Cut dense foam padding to shape and made a basic wood frame from 1/8" ply.
 Not pictured is 2 tie wraps and some tape that will pin it all together for 
    flight.
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