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"Relapse" (Estes Eliminator)
Story time... I got halfway serious with rockets back in 2003 (after building a Wizard in 2001 and letting it sit for two years), and kept them flying until work and other projects had taken-over my time by 2007. Five years ago I had another very brief stint after breaking some winter boredom with the construction of a Der Red Max, and a couple other kits that followed while first-experimenting with shoving cameras into rockets, but by summer I had lost interest again after a road was paved through my flying site.
Jump ahead some years; I dug a couple rockets out for display after discovering the occasionally-intense pros and cons of Chicago's climate were ruining the finish of some of my 2010-builds. My kid-nephew took notice, so for his birthday I got him an Alpha III and walked him through building it. Last month we finally got around to launching it at a new flying site (the undeveloped lot where Lakehurst Mall once-stood); I de-mothballed and flew a few more of my own builds because why not. Despite the scaled-down arsenal (about half of them - mostly plastic crap/fly and forgets - remain in storage): I'm officially calling it a comeback. Photography is a long-running gig (and now side-profession) of mine, and one of the rockets I've always had among my film camera collection (instead of storage with the rockets) was my Astrocam - an RTF version rated for 200iso. Awhile ago I picked up some fresh 110 film from Lomography for testing, so when my nephew and I went to fly I broke the stuff out before it expired. On its second flight the booster decided to GTFO and separated from the camera - fortunately I was able to recover the latter from atop a nearby Dunkin Donuts. Lacking a booster and left with many exposures to go... enter my first build in five years: an eBay-bought Estes Eliminator... Reminder of Estes' marketing logic. But hey; now my Challenger-1 clone has a parachute after 5 years. I'm retaining the 18" nylon chute from before, so the plastic 24-er went on my Maxi Alpha 3. Straightforward build except I abhorred the deep tube spirals, so before assembly I sanded, filled, sanded, primed, sanded, primed, sanded, and painted-painted the body tubes and launch lugs. I also wanted to avoid a repeat of the old booster's fate, so I grabbed a length of Kevlar cord and will be using this method from here-on instead of the paper/glue mount on future builds. I cut a notch into the green engine mount ring for the cord to lay flush. ...and our finished product. Purple was also not my thing, but semi-gloss Rusto was, and in the end gave an almost-matte finish that matched the Astrocam nicely. Not bothering with the stickers, this one's going to be more function than form, anyway.
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[jonrevProjects] Last edited by jonrev : 09-01-2015 at 12:47 AM. |
#2
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Quote:
Again, . Looking forward to seeing your pics when you get them. I got one of a curb near the school at B6-4 Field. Other than that nothing was recognizable.
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Bill Eichelberger NAR 79563 http://wallyum.blogspot.com/ I miss being SAM 0058 Build floor: Estes - Low Boom SST Semroc - Marauder, Shrike, SST Shuttle In paint: Canaroc - Starfighter Scorpion Centuri - Mini Dactyl Estes - F-22 Air Superiority Fighter, Multi-Roc, Solar Sailer II, Xarconian Cruiser Semroc - Cyber III Ready to fly: Estes - Solar Sailer II Semroc - Earmark |
#3
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I got one of the barn at the East Branch Forest Preserve from a NIRA launch 10 years ago. The higher altitude and sturdier booster should help - waiting for perfect weather is what kills me. Lomography has some decent stuff for 110 but I wish they'd pop out something 400iso or faster.
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[jonrevProjects] |
#4
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Best picture from my son's Snapshot some years ago:
That rocket pretty much set me on the path to being here today.
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Rich Holmes Camillus, NY Secretary / newsletter editor Syracuse Rocket Club http://richsrockets.wordpress.com |
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