[ Not displaying correctly? View web version. ] | Apogee Rocketry Workshop #295: | We are often asked, "How do you put the parachute inside the parachute protector and get it ready for flight?" This week we are going to cover how to fold your parachute and insert the protector correctly. This will make sure your parachute deploys exactly the way you want it too. For some rockets, you will want the parachute to open right away. For others, you'd want to slow it down. There are a lot of different tips and tricks to folding the parachute and using it with the parachute protector. After watching this video, you will know how to use a parachute protector in a model rocket, you'll know how to affect the opening rate of your chute, and all the tips and tricks we can give you! In the Peak-of-Flight newsletter we have published many different rocket plans, all at no cost! You can now get a set of 25 different rocket plans as our free gift when you subscribe to our newsletter! And if you're a subscriber, and if you already haven't downloaded the Plan Pack, you will find it here. You will be asked to complete the store check-out process in order to download, but it is totally free for you. If you'd like decals for the rockets in the plan pack, we do have them available here. View this week's Rocketry Workshop Video (Duration: 6:42) | Previous videos are found on our archive page. |
Check out the latest products to hit Apogee's shelves! Experimental Composite Propellant Cookbook | Looking to make your own rocket motors? This guidebook is a great place to start. Experimental Composite Propellant by Professor Terry McCreary PhD. details the formulas, safety precautions, design, construction and testing of small rocket motors. This isn't for everyone. We recommend it for those people in countries where we can't ship rocket motors. |
1/4-20 X 9" long Threaded Rod | This is the threaded-rod (sometimes called "all-thread" stud) that we use for our own 98mm e-bay kit. Now you can make your own electronic-bays for your fiberglass rockets or your own home-made scratch-built designs. Use standard 1/4"-20 nuts available from your local hardware store. |
AeroTech Arreauxbee-Hi | The AeroTech Arreauxbee-Hi is a great initiation into larger mid-power rockets. It is a straightforward assembly, with a clean orange and metallic asthetic. The rocket can house a variety of rocket motors and flies with great stability. |
54mm Fly-Away Rail Guide | The 54mm Fly-Away Rail Guide can be used to launch those 54mm diameter rockets that do not have a rail button or rail guide. The advantage of removing the rail buttons is that it reduces the drag of the rocket and allows it to soar higher. Package contains one set of rail guides that will fit on a 54mm (thick-wall tube) rocket. |
18mm Engine Retainers | The Estes 18mm engine retainers are used to prevent rocket engines from sliding rearward out of the rocket. The advantage is they are cheaper in price than aluminum retainers, and that will save you money for your other projects. Now you can make your low power rockets look like they are high-power! |
| |
| “I have been doing business with Apogee since before 2010. If you can name a rocket kit or part, chances are I have ordered them from Apogee. I can honestly and truly say that their service and support is exemplary, and I have spent countless hours enjoying the newsletters and workshops (and have learned so much more, than I ever thought I would). So I would like to take this opportunity to urge you ALL to give your business to Apogee, and I would also like to extend my personal thanks to Tim and his excellent crew for everything that they have helped me with over the years... whenever I needed it, they are there. One more thing I would like to add, it the wonderful relationships that they maintain with the vendors in the hobby. It's second to none! THANK YOU for SO MANY years of awesome service - looking forward to many more!” — Dennis Murphy | |
We're looking for someone to write a definitive guide to selecting igniters, controllers and batteries for rockets. We'd love to have a newsletter article on that topic, because we get lots of inquiries about it. Is that you? Do you know how many e-matches can be set off in a cluster by a 3.7v 400 mAh battery? See our Newsletter Guidelines on how to submit an article on this topic and get paid upto $350 for your time. | |
|
I need help with generating the bi-weekly newsletter articles since it takes a lot of effort to put them together. And I'm willing to pay big bucks for your help. So ask yourself, are you looking to earn some extra money? I'm now actively seeking writers for articles to appear in this newsletter. And I want unique and cutting-edge articles because that is what you want to read, right? I realize this, so to get articles from outside writers that have the same level of quality, I'm going to have to pay a lot of cash to make it worth it for them. So I've come up with a compensation package where I'll pay up to $350 for good how-to articles. Are you a writer, and does that interest you? That is a lot of cash! Far more than you'll get by writing for other magazines. And with over 23,000 worldwide subscribers, if you write for the Peak-of-Flight Newsletter, you'll gain a lot of notoriety. Writing for the Peak-of-Flight Newsletter is a great way to show off your rocketry projects and your technical expertise, at the same time as helping out other rocketeers. Imagine how great you'll feel knowing that you made a difference to the hobby. If you're interested in writing, see the guidelines on our site. | |
| |