then you all can say "<your name> told you so"
--
Tater
President of MARS Club
www.treece.org/mars.htm
NAR #79654
AMA #747769
EAA #22007969
remove spam spelled backwards to reply
Bring your sun block. Forcast for Bong on Saturday is partly cloudy and
57 degrees. Wind S-SW 11 mph.
Good luck on that Level 1.
Joel. phx
(you'll do fine)
Never eat yellow snow. (What the heck is snow and what color should it be?)
"tater schuld" <tat...@maps.charter.net> wrote in message
news:v6qq5t6...@corp.supernews.com...
It's normally a white powdery form of solidified water... occasionally
(in unusual ambient conditions) it occurs naturally; it can probably
be prepared synthetically by spraying water in a fine mist through a
stream of low-temperature air (LTA).
Since LTA is an unstable material, with an extremely short half-life -
minutes or hours - when stored under ordinary conditions, it is best to
use a refrigeration device to prepare a fresh supply, as needed for the
synthesis of "snow", rather than attempting to obtain it commercially.
However, the usual commercially-available grades of water should be
adequate, but if "field expedient" sources of this material are
utilized, or if the final product should become contaminated with water
from such sources, the undesirable "yellow" color may become apparent.
-dave w
double check that the ejection charge is in and the parachute is attached!
other than that....don't soil yourself! ;-)
Good Luck
Lew Garrow
TRA 7181 L3
NAR 77928 L3
METRA VP
NAR L3CC
****remove the plex from my email to reply****
And rubber boots to slog through the mud.
--
Scott D. Hansen - NAR #73268 SR
Ye Olde Rocket Shoppe - Your One Stop BAR Shoppe!
http://www.rocketshoppe.com
WOOSH NAR Section #558 http://www.wooshrocketry.org
"tater schuld" <tat...@maps.charter.net> wrote in message
news:v6qq5t6...@corp.supernews.com...
If flying quantum tubing or using a piston system, cold weather shrinks the
QT enough to constrict the piston. Make sure to check piston travel on cold
days. Bring along a piece of sand paper and sand if need be.
Secondly, check to make sure you have vent holes where necessary.
Third, don't trust tape to hold nosecones, tap two or three screws into it
to secure it.
Lastly, be sure to mark your CP on your rocket. Cert'ing is about learning,
and that's the first thing you should be aware of on larger rockets to be
sure about safety.
Good luck on your certs. Let us know how they go.
--
Wade "Boomer" VanderBoom
NAR 80343 Level 2
TRA 9344 Level 2
ASRA
President-DART-SD
"Let Your Inner Child Out To Play"
http://www.DakotaThunder.org
"tater schuld" <tat...@maps.charter.net> wrote in message
news:v6qq5t6...@corp.supernews.com...
Mark A palmer
TRA 08542 L2
Good luck!
"tater schuld" <tat...@maps.charter.net> wrote in message
news:v6qq5t6...@corp.supernews.com...
In my opinion, this is overkill for a single deploy level 1 cert rocket. Just
make sure someone with high power experience checks the fit (should also be
checked by the RSO).
If you are going to advise the use of sheer pins/screws, you also need to tell
people how to compute the amount of black powder needed to sheer those pins
(e.g. http://www.info-central.org/recovery_powder.shtml). I also would
advise a ground test for any new rocket/sheer pin configuration.
John Marvin
j...@fc.hp.com
NAR 75392 L2
"Boomer" <live...@enetis.net> wrote in message
news:b4lnl4$20i398$1...@ID-136148.news.dfncis.de...
I thought that was what paint overspray was for....
Think simple.
Joel. phx
"John Tinelli JR" <tint...@rochester.rr.com> wrote in message
news:11Tba.22011$yc5....@twister.nyroc.rr.com...