#1
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The Price od Balsa...Yikes!!!
The last time I purchased an order of balsa it had gone up in price from $9.00 for a 3"x3" x 3 6"
block to $13.00 a block. No big deal right. This time $24.00 for the same piece. 3"x 4" x 35" is $45.77! OUCH! but...free shipping. Sorry, just venting.
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"I'm a sandman. I've never killed anyone. I terminate runners when their time is up." Logan from "Logan's Run" http://sandmandecals.com/ |
#2
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And I used to think two part urethane foam was expensive when I was turning large nosecones. Good thing I still have several balsa blocks left!
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I love sanding. |
#3
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Maybe the folks in Cadillac are buying up the world's supply? Of course, the last time I was there, they said the windmill industry was buying a lot of it and they were fighting for their supply.
(AAR Cadillac now AAR Mobility Systems) I see that the Busy Bee is permanently closed.... Quote:
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-Fred Shecter NAR 20117 (L2) Southern California Rocket Association, NAR Section 430 |
#4
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Quote:
I first started hearing the windmill industry was driving up prices around 10 + years ago. It didn't help prices any when Lonestar Balsa went up in flames about the same time. Wind farms are increasing so I don't see it getting better. They should go to two part marine foam and leave the balsa to us.
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I love sanding. |
#5
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What about some other heavier woods? Still cheap, and you want some weight up front anyway. Some of the old kit producers used to use hardwood.
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#6
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Balsa is a hardwood.
Pine (FSI cones) is a softwood. Density does not equal 'type' of wood. I've had a few tens of thousands of nose cones made from Birch. For BT-5, 30, 50. I still have hundreds of the NC-5 cones and 3 foot long BT-5 tubes. I used to make a LOT of kits for local classes. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Softwood Quote:
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-Fred Shecter NAR 20117 (L2) Southern California Rocket Association, NAR Section 430 |
#7
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Thanks for the lesson, Fred. But I think you knew what I meant. And like I said, some of the kit producers used hardwood (balsa).
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#8
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I periodically hear grumbling about plastic cones on a Estes kits. It’s certainly understandable that Estes has mostly (exclusively?) gone to plastic, with recent prices on balsa, and no doubt real difficulty trying to secure enough for runs of 1000s of kits.
I have bought a few 3x3x12 balsa blocks at Hobby Lobby. I think I paid $11 List, which was $6.60 after the 40% coupon. I may go buy more! The quality was pretty good, turned well on the lathe. UPDATE: Just looked at one in my shop. List was $8.99, so that is just $5.40 after coupon. May go tonight to see if they have any. And, see if they have stocked the new exclusive kits yet.
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Lee Reep NAR 55948 Projects: Semroc Saturn 1B, Ken Foss Designs Mini Satellite Interceptor In the Paint Shop: Nothing! Too cold! Launch-Ready: Farside-X, Maxi Honest John, Super Scamp |
#9
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I have no problem whatsoever with Estes using plastic nosecones, even with classic kits that once had balsa as long as they are shaped correctly.
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I love sanding. |
#10
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Quote:
I use a lot of basswood for nose cones, tail cones and transitions but oddly enough almost exclusively for high power like 3”, 4” and up to 6” but they get pretty heavy. For smaller Low power stuff I get an occasional request but mostly for balsa in the low and mid power sizes
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"I'm a sandman. I've never killed anyone. I terminate runners when their time is up." Logan from "Logan's Run" http://sandmandecals.com/ |
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