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OregonRocketry
held the Summer Skies launch on June 15-17, 2007 at their launch
site 2.5 miles southwest of
Brothers Oregon. Friday and Saturday were scheduled for flying
certified commercial motors. Sunday was a research launch day
for flying experimental motors. |
It was a nice weekend to fly rockets! We
had warm temperatures, light winds and blue skies all three days. I
arrived on Friday about midday and began setting up camp. By 6:00pm
I had Scorpion on the pad and ready to
fly. It was launched on an
Aerotech L850
and reached 10,328 feet. Scorpion deploys the main chute at apogee so it
landed 1.4 miles away in the light wind. Right after touch down, a
whole crew of us set out to recover it. Scott Morrison drove his
suburban and took me along with his son Pat, daughter Sarah, Jane Fossen
and Chris Beekman right to it. The rocket was only 200 feet from the small
two-track dirt road we were on. There was no damage so we declared
victory and headed back to camp. It was a very good start to the
weekend and now it was time for dinner! Photos and a short
launch video of this flight can be found further down this page.
This was the 32nd flight of Scorpion.
On Saturday I launched
Angelfire on an
Aerotech M1419.
The liftoff was an awesome boost. It was relatively slow and looked
very straight. This was the first flight of Angelfire after the
repairs to the damage suffered on
flight #9 last October.
It proved the repaired fin was just fine. There was not even any
roll that could be observed as it climbed into the sky. Angelfire
reached 10,740 feet and deployed a small drogue chute. My
GPS radio downlink
electronics were on-board for this flight. I was able to see the
actual altitudes in real time as it came down. At 1000 feet to
go it deployed the main chute and then softly touched down 0.97 miles
away. Once again Scott Morrison was kind enough to drive me and Jane out
to recover it. It was 0.21 miles from the dirt road so Scott also
helped me carry it back to his vehicle. Photos and a nice launch
video are presented below. The 3-D flight trajectory captured by the
GPS system is also presented below. You can even view it using Google
Earth to look at it from any angle.
On Sunday, I prepped
Vulcan to fly on an
Aerotech M1315.
It weighed 36.1 pounds ready to fly. Once again there was a breeze coming
in from the west. Vulcan left the 12 foot launch rail at a slight angle
heading to the west. It then proceeded to weathercock a bit more as
it was heading up-wind. This arc continued throughout the long coast time
after motor burnout as Vulcan was making a long gradual gravity turn.
As Vulcan reached apogee it was still traveling pretty fast. The
main chute was deployed right when it should be but the airspeed was too
much for it. The chute snapped open and was instantly shredded.
Vulcan had reached 11,017 feet. It's highest flight ever, but it was
doomed at that point and fell to its destruction during the two minute
ride back to the ground. It landed about one mile due south of the
launch site. Photos can be seen below. This was the 26th
(and last) flight of Vulcan.
Click on any photo on
this page to see a larger version of it. |


Photo by Vern Knowles
This is the view while
standing at the high power pads and looking back toward the flight line.
It was taken on Saturday afternoon.
Click here to see a large high resolution panorama.
(1.8 MB file.)
Click here to see a smaller low resolution panorama.
(279 KB file.)
NOTE: Most web browsers will automatically scale these
panorama images to fit the width of your computer window. If yours
does that, then be sure to expand the image to full size. You should
be able to pan across the large image and get a good look at the whole
flight line. |

Photo by Vern Knowles |
The LCO area of the flight
line as seen on Saturday afternoon. |

Scorpion was launched
for the 32nd time at 6:12 pm on Friday, June 15, 2007.
This flight was on an
Aerotech L850
motor. The boost looked great and the timing of the parachute
deployment by the MissileWorks altimeters
also looked very good. Scorpion slowly drifted back down on a
Rocketman
R12 chute and landed 1.4 miles away with no damage. It had
reached 10,328 feet. |
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Photo by Robert Krausert |

Photo by Vern Knowles |

Photo by Vern Knowles |


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Angelfire was launched at about 10:00 am
Saturday morning on an
Aerotech M1419.
The boost was a spectacular display of power as Angelfire slowly climbed
into the clear blue sky. That sight never gets old! Angelfire
reached apogee at 10,740 feet and then deployed a small drogue chute.
It dropped back down for 1.5 minutes and then with 1000 feet to go it
deployed the big main chute. It drifted off to the northeast and
eventually touched down 0.97 miles away. This was the tenth flight of
Angelfire.
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Photo by Vern Knowles |
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Photo by Scott Morrison |

Photo by Vern Knowles |
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Jane Fossen helps gather up
the blue tubular nylon recovery harness for Angelfire. |
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Angelfire
GPS Flight Data |
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Angelfire carried a GPS
receiver and a radio transmitter in the nosecone. The transmitter
sent the GPS coordinates as well as speed and altitude data to a
receiver on the ground. This data was then recorded in a small hand
held computer for later analysis.
Click here to see more
details about this system. After the flight, this data was
combined with the data from the onboard ARTS recording altimeter. This
allowed the GPS trajectory to be color coded for each phase of the flight by using timing information from the altimeter.
The section for motor burn is shown in red. The coast phase is in
blue. The drogue chute was deployed at the point where the blue
turns to yellow. The yellow trace shows the path Angelfire fell
while on drogue. The green trace is the path while on main chute.
Four images of this trajectory were generated by Google
Earth and are shown below.
The vertical scales in
these images have tic marks every 1000 feet. They help show the
10,328 foot apogee reported by the GPS system. The scale also drops
straight down to the ground from apogee so it shows the point on the
ground where apogee occurred. Click on any
image below to see a larger version of it. |
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Angelfire
Flight Trajectory
Looking West
Motor Burn
Coast Phase
Drogue chute
deployed
Main chute
deployed |
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Angelfire
Flight Trajectory
Looking North
Motor Burn
Coast Phase
Drogue chute
deployed
Main chute
deployed |
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Angelfire
Flight Trajectory
Looking East
Motor Burn
Coast Phase
Drogue chute
deployed
Main chute
deployed |
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Angelfire
Flight Trajectory
Looking South
Motor Burn
Coast Phase
Drogue chute
deployed
Main chute
deployed |
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You can view this
trajectory in simulated 3D by downloading the data file at the link below and
loading it into Google
Earth. You can then use all the standard pan, tilt and zoom
controls in Google
Earth to see it from any angle. (Google Earth is a FREE program
available here.)
If you already have Google
Earth installed, then you should be able to simply click on this link and
it will "fly you" to the Brothers launch site and display the Angelfire
trajectory. If that doesn't work, then right click on the link, save
the file to a convenient place and then open the file from within Google
Earth.
Link to Google Earth data file for Angelfire flight trajectory. |
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Altitude reported by GPS
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Velocity reported by GPS
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The charts above
show the altitude and velocity data reported by the GPS system. Each
point in the plot represents one GPS reading. This GPS unit updates at
five times per second. (Readings are spaced apart by 200ms.) The
peak altitude was 10,328 feet above the ground. The peak velocity
reported by the GPS was 537 mph. (The peak velocity reported by the ARTS
recording altimeter was 515 mph.) The sink rate on the drogue chute
was 66 mph. The sink rate on the
main chute was about 13 mph.
Click here to view Angelfire
GPS data plots in PDF format
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Angelfire
Altimeter Flight Data |
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Six pages of analysis of
the data from the ARTS recording altimeter are presented below. You
can click on each page individually to see an image of it, or you can get
all six pages at once in a higher resolution PDF document.
Click here to view Angelfire Flight Data in PDF format
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Page 1 |

Page 2 |

Page 3 |

Page 4 |

Page 5 |

Page 6 |
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Angelfire carries enough
electronics that it was possible to determine the peak altitude in five
different ways. The two MissileWorks altimeters
reported the peak altitude to be 10,552 and 10,928 feet. The ARTS
altimeter reported the peak altitude as 11,164 feet based on the
accelerometer and 10,215 feet based on the pressure sensor. And
lastly, the GPS reported the peak to be 10,328 feet. The accelerometer
reading is the one that differs the most from all the others. It
disagrees by about 9% or so. The other four readings all agree
within -3% to +4%. The average of all
five readings is 10,637 feet.
Maximum acceleration was
5.4 G's. Peak velocity was 755 ft/sec (515 mph). Angelfire
reached apogee in 27.1 seconds. After that, it dropped on the drogue
chute for 1.56 minutes at -97.0 ft/sec and then fired the main chute
ejection charge at 1065 feet. It dropped on the main chute at
-17.6 ft/sec for 41.2 seconds. Total flight time was
2.75 minutes.
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The last flight of Vulcan |
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Vulcan was launched on Aerotech M1315
motor. It lifted Vulcan smartly off the pad but the rocket tipped off the rail
just a bit and headed up at a slight angle. By the time it reached
apogee it was also suffering from the effects of a gradual gravity turn as
a result of the long burn time and the long coast time from the big M-motor. Consequently, it was still going pretty fast at apogee.
The main chute was deployed (as planned) at apogee but the airspeed was
too much for it. It was immediately shredded. Vulcan had
reached 11,017 feet. It's highest flight ever, but it was doomed at
that point and fell to its destruction during the two minute ride back to
the ground. |
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Vulcan was carrying a
digital camera and a digital camcorder on this flight. The photo
at the upper left is from the onboard camera. It shows Vulcan high above
the desert floor during its descent back to the ground. The
booster is still in fine condition in that photo but it would not be much
longer! The flight line can be seen in the upper right photo. |
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The photo above is just
seconds before impact. |
| This photo shows the Vulcan fin-can as it landed. It was destroyed |
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This shows the body tube
that got zippered by the recovery harness.
Vulcan was built in a "zipper less"
configuration but it still suffered a massive zipper as well as impact
damage to the body tube. The onboard cameras and the electronic altimeters
survived the flight. The motor case and plastic nosecone were fine
too. The airframe was a total loss.
Vulcan was designed to be a single
deployment system. It was intended to deploy the main chute at apogee along with the
cameras in the payload bay. To help avoid the kind of failure mode
suffered on this flight, it might be a good idea to pack the main chute in
a deployment bag that delays the opening of the main chute for at least a
short while. During that time a drogue chute could be used to slow
it down a bit. The drogue could then pull the main chute out of the
deployment bag. This type of system has it's own set of failure
modes, so it's not clear if it is a net improvement in overall reliability
or not. However, it probably would have prevented this particular
failure mode.
Vulcan had a total of 26
flights. That's a pretty good number. |

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I also attended the OROC
Summer Skies launch last year. Some great photos of it and my
report from that launch can be found here. |
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