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Home / Features / Launch Reports
Hobby Rocketry Launch Reports
Oregonian attempts ambitious N-N-M 3-stage flight at XPRS
Launch Report by Planet News   
Monday, September 25, 2006
Oregonian attempts ambitious N-N-M 3-stage flight at XPRS

GERLACH, Nevada USA — The Black Rock Desert was the place to be this past weekend for rocketeers for the annual XPRS launch.  XPRS is the acronym for eXtreme Performance Rocket Ships, a name coined at a session in the AERO-PAC camp during the 2001 LDRS launch at Lucerne, California. 

The individual credited with conceiving the concept was Tom Cloud, an AERO-PAC member who passed away in December of 2001.  The intent was to create a "Triple Crown" of Tripoli launches and it completes the triumvirate of LDRS and BALLS. Black Rock, considered the supreme rocket launching site in the world for all types of hobby rocketry, is uniquely suited to field such an event.

 
Civilian Space Exploration Team Space Shot 2000 Launch
Launch Report by Civilian Space Exploration Team   
Thursday, October 05, 2000
Civilian Space Exploration Team Space Shot 2000 Launch
BLACK ROCK DESERT, Nevada USA — On Friday September 29th the Civilian Space Exploration Team successfully launched the SPACESHOT 2000 rocket at 8:40AM PST from the Black Rock Desert in Northern Nevada. The vehicle trajectory was nominal up to motor burnout (max Q) with an altitude of 40,000 fe...
 
Launch Report: NARAM-42 in Colorado
Launch Report by Mark ''Bunny'' Bundick & Ted Cochran   
Sunday, July 30, 2000
Launch Report: NARAM-42 in Colorado
CANON CITY, Colorado USA — Over 200 registered participants have decended on Canon City, Colorado for a week of rocket flying fun and competition. NARAM-42 represents a year of intensive planning and preparation by the COSROC and CRASH NAR Sections led by Contest Director Ken Mizoi. The first ...
 
LDRS 18 in Argonia, Kansas: High temps and higher flights
Launch Report by Darrell D. Mobley   
Friday, July 30, 1999
LDRS 18 in Argonia, Kansas: High temps and higher flights
ARGONIA, Kansas USA — The Tripoli Rocketry Association's 18th national launch LDRS opened with a bang in remote Argonia, Kansas, fielding one of the largest opening day crowds in event history.  Here in the heartland of America, one gets the feeling of being close to the soul of Mother Ear...
 
Looking back at NAR's National Sport Launch 99
Launch Report by Chuck Andrus   
Thursday, June 03, 1999
Looking back at NAR's National Sport Launch 99
ARDMORE, Alabama USA — Staged this past Memorial Day weekend, The National Association of Rocketry's National Sport Launch '99 has come and gone. I don't have a lot of range statistics to throw around, nor details of some of the most interesting flight I've ever seen. Even thou...
 
MARS team breaks UK altitude record
Launch Report by M.A.R.S.   
Tuesday, April 13, 1999
MARS team breaks UK altitude record
LINCOLNSHIRE, England UK — On Sunday, April 4, 1999, Hugh Gemmell of the Sheffield Rocketry Association flew a PML Thunder and Lightning in it's two stage configuration with an AeroTech J570W in the booster and a J350 in the sustainer. This 2.6" rocket reached a recorded apogee of 10,010 f...
 
Hill Country Tripoli hosts successful Paradise 2 launch
Launch Report by Steve Baughman   
Saturday, April 10, 1999
Hill Country Tripoli hosts successful Paradise 2 launch
EDEN, Texas USA — Though it was only the first widely publicized event at this site, the Paradise 2 rocket launch hosted in Eden, Texas by the Hill Country Tripoli organization turned out to be quite a success. Held on Febrary 27-28 1999, on 1600 acres of West Texas ranch land about 30 miles e...
 
Patriot Explorer I highlights Rocket City Blastoff
Launch Report by Chuck Andrus, HARA   
Sunday, November 01, 1998
Patriot Explorer I highlights Rocket City Blastoff
ARDMORE, Alabama USA — All eyes are on pad number eleven as the countdown commences. The K550 instantly barks to life, raising the 1/2 scale Patriot on a column of smoke and flame. A roaring echo can be heard from the distant tree line as the missile travels to apogee, 2000 feet above. A brief...
 
LDRS 17 at Bonneville: Feeling The Need For Speed
Launch Report by Darrell D. Mobley   
Sunday, August 09, 1998
LDRS 17 at Bonneville: Feeling The Need For Speed
WENDOVER, Nevada USA — Day One of LDRS 17 is history and it was an exciting opening to the Tripoli Rocketry Association's national launch, Large and Dangerous Rocket Ships, or LDRS for short. This year's launch is the first year the launch had been held on the Bonneville Salt Flats. D...
 
Clustered motor record broken
Launch Report by Darrell D. Mobley   
Saturday, July 04, 1998
Clustered motor record broken
ARGONIA, Kansas USA — On Sunday, shortly before noon, a rocket named MINI-MAX, "Mini's to the Max" made history. A record 269 of 288 Estes A10-0 mini-engines lifted a 18.25 lb rocket off of pad Yellow 8 at Air Fest 3 near Argonia, Kansas. The designer and builder, Larry Drake, of Omaha, NE...
 
Video of the RRS 50 Mile Flight at Black Rock
Launch Report by Reaction Research Society   
Saturday, July 04, 1998
Video of the RRS 50 Mile Flight at Black Rock
GERLACH, Nevada USA — At 2:00pm PST on November 23, 1996, the Reaction Research Society (RRS) launched an amateur rocket from the Black Rock Desert with live amateur television (ATV) cameras aboard. These ATV transmissions were recorded and are now available in .AVI format. It contains clips ...
 
HALO Project makes amatuer rocketry history
Launch Report by Huntsville Alabama L5 Society   
Monday, May 12, 1997
HALO Project makes amatuer rocketry history
HAMPSTEAD, North Carolina USA — At 8:25 AM EDT, on a record cold Mother's Day morning on Sunday, May 11, a small group of space enthusiasts made amateur rocketry history by launching the first amateur rocket from a high altitude balloon, a concept known as a "rockoon". The group, the Hunt...
 
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High Power Rocketry's Top 10 Biggest Regional Launches

I have a friend who has the goal of watching a baseball game in every big league stadium in America. He's been to Wrigley Field and Yankee Stadium, to Fenway Park and Chavez Ravine, and a dozen other parks scattered throughout the land. Every year he makes it to a new field, sometimes even two, and returns home with great memories—and enough hats and shirts—to last a lifetime.His most recent journey—to Progressive Field in Cleveland—got me thinking about high power rocketry's biggest venues and how this hobby has continued to grow in the last ten years. Some impressive traditions are alive and well out there at the biggest regional events in America.

 

Chasing the N record: Pursuing stratospheric dreams

Four years ago, James Dougherty didn't know the difference between a G80 and an M2500. A computer programmer from Northern California, Dougherty spent most of his time in Silicon Valley helping start-up companies and their customers with complex computer systems. In his spare time he liked to drive sports cars, have fun at the beach, or just hang out with his wife and daughter.Today, Dougherty is among a handful of hard core, high-power rocketry enthusiasts — in the United States and abroad — who are quickly moving toward a new altitude record for a commercial N motor. These fliers, taking advantage of technologic advancements in rocket motors and recovery systems — and their own hard work — believe they can clear 50,000 feet, or higher, on a single N. That's an altitude nearly two miles higher than commercial jetliners typically fly, and close to four miles higher than the peak of Mt. Everest. This is the realm of the stratosphere, where thunderstorms are born and the air density is nearly one-eighth that found at sea level.

 

One man's quest to honor America's Saturn V rocket

On April 25, 2009, history will be made.  At Higgs Farm in Price, Maryland, Steve Eves will enter the history books as the person who flew the largest scale model rocket in history. The rocket will weigh over 1,600 pounds, it will stand over 36 feet tall and it will be powered by a massive array of nine motors: eight 13,000ns N-Class motors and a 77,000ns P-Class motor. The estimated altitude of this single stage effort will be between 3,000 and 4,000 feet and the project will be recovered at apogee. In a special to Rocketry Planet, author Mark B. Canepa and ROCKETS Magazine wish to share Steve Eve's story with the readers here.

 

The Jarvis Illustrated Guide to Carbon Fiber Construction

Over the last few years, many people have asked Jim Jarvis of Austin, Texas, how he makes his carbon fiber rockets. So when he had an opportunity to make a new fin can, he decided to document the process in detail.The result of the build was the TooCarbYen Tutorial presented in this article. Actually, tutorial isn't a particularly accurate name for the build since it implies instruction on the proper way to do something. This article isn't about the best way to build carbon fiber rockets, it's about how Jim builds carbon fiber rockets, presented in enough detail to allow others to execute the process if they so choose.

 

HJ101: Turbocharging the Estes Maxi Brute Honest John

This edition of the Rocketry Planet How-To Classroom is based on the Estes Maxi Brute Honest John, a 1/9 scale model of the venerable ballistic missile used by the United States Army. This class covers the Estes first edition Maxi Brute kit #1269 released in 1975, the Estes second edition Collector Series kit #1269 released in 1993 or the third edition Maxi Brute kit #2166 released in 2000.This kit is approaching collector status, if it hasn't already, and you can still find them occassionally on eBay for reasonable prices. This class project features dual deployment with an altimeter bay, fiberglass airframe reinforcing and fiberglass fins to replace the thin styrene shells that come in the standard kit. In fact, of the original kits, we are mainly using the styrene fin canisters and the two-piece styrene nose cones while replacing most everything else — this is imperative to be able to fly these kits on 38mm and 54mm motors.

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National Sport Launch
May 26 - 28, 2012
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