Overview of Hobby Rocketry

26
1 Overview of Hobby Rocketry Chisholm Trail Middle School November 30, 2010

description

Overview of Hobby Rocketry. Chisholm Trail Middle School November 30, 2010. Topics. Introductions Rocketry Basics Rocket Motors Materials of Construction Electronics. http://www.aarg.org/. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rocketry-austin/. What Can We Learn from Rocketry?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Overview of Hobby Rocketry

Page 1: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

1

Overview of Hobby Rocketry

Chisholm Trail Middle School

November 30, 2010

Page 2: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

2

TopicsIntroductionsRocketry BasicsRocket MotorsMaterials of ConstructionElectronics

Page 3: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

3

http://www.aarg.org/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rocketry-austin/

Page 4: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

4

What Can We Learn from Rocketry?Physics – Newton’s Laws & Laws of MotionAerodynamics – Stability, DragElectronics – Flight Computers, GPS, TelemetryMeteorology – Wind, Air PressureComputers – Data Collection, Flight SimulationMathematics – Calculus, TrigonometryEngineering – Problem Solving, MaterialsCraftsmanship, Teamwork & Safety

… and we can have fun too!

Page 5: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

5

Page 6: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

6

Page 7: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

7

Page 8: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

8

Page 9: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

9

Page 10: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

10

Page 11: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

11

Page 12: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

12“L” Motor – 2,560 to 5,120 N-sec

Page 13: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

13

Page 14: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

14

Page 15: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

15

Page 16: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

16

Rocket MotorsGeneral Types of Rocket Motors

Black powder (A though E motors)APCP (Ammonium perchlorate composite propellant)

“Composite” means a mixture of fuel, oxidizer & binder Hydrocarbon binders & metals are the fuel Ammonium perchlorate - NH4ClO4 - is the oxidizer

Hybrid motors with PVC fuel & N2O oxidizer

Liquid-fueled motors

APCP Motors are made with Multiple “Grains”Grain configuration controls the burn characteristics

Page 17: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

17

Rocket Airframe MaterialsIn Order of Increasing Strength:

CardboardPhenolic cardboardFiberglassCarbon fiberMetal (aluminum)

Fiberglass with Epoxy and Carbon Fiber with Epoxy are Examples of “Composite” Materials

Page 18: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

18

Rocketry ElectronicsAltimeters

Detect apogee & break rocket apartDeploy main parachute at low altitude Ignite other motors (multi-stage motors & “air-starts”)

Telemetry & Rocket “Finding” DevicesBuzzers & beepersRadio signals for directional trackingTelemetry & GPS

PayloadsScience & meteorology experimentsWhatever else you can imagine!

Page 19: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

19

Example GPS Flight Profile

Page 20: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

20

Altimeter “Apogee” Detection MethodsBarometric Detection

Barometric sensor measures air pressureApogee is sensed when air pressure increasesAdvantages – Measures actual apogeeDisadvantages – Prone to error (e.g., pressure spikes)

Accelerometer CalculationAccelerometer measures positive “G’s” during motor

burn & negative “G’s” during coast phaseApogee is calculated when integral of positive G’s

over time is equal to the integral of negative G’sAdvantages – Not sensitive to pressure variationsDisadvantages – Non-vertical flight profile

Page 21: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

21

Barometric Pressure vs Altitude

Page 22: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

22

Altimeter “Apogee” Detection MethodsBarometric Detection

Barometric sensor measures air pressureApogee is sensed when air pressure increasesAdvantages – Measures actual apogeeDisadvantages – Prone to error (e.g., pressure spikes)

Accelerometer CalculationAccelerometer measures positive “G’s” during motor

burn & negative “G’s” during coast phaseApogee is calculated when integral of positive G’s

over time is equal to the integral of negative G’sAdvantages – Not sensitive to pressure variationsDisadvantages – Non-vertical flight profile

Page 23: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

23

Example Flight Data

Page 24: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

24

Calculating Apogee from Acceleration Data

Page 25: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

25

Jim’s Highest Flight (So Far!)TooCarbYen:

Two-stage rocket Booster motor – N4000 Sustainer motor – M1350

Maximum Speed – Mach 2.3 (About 1,740 mph)Altitudes:

Booster motor burnout – 5,000 feet Sustainer motor start – 10,000 feet Sustainer motor burnout – 20,000 feet Maximum altitude – 55,000 feet

Recovered 3 Miles from Launch Site (via GPS)

Page 26: Overview of Hobby Rocketry

26

TooCarbYen Before Launch