gee, that was a perfect flight! much better than some of my own little rockets that land ages away let alone loosing them! i am currently working on a aproximatley 1.8M tall rocket, although i dont know what engine i would use.PS im in australia and im 14 this year, dont know if you would need a lisence for that sort of size? please get back to me on that..
@f22raptor861 yes you need to have a lisence to do that im also in this rocketry club at age 16 you have to be a level three or higher to launch this big
That makes a nice sound.
calishortfilms 3 months ago
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That couldn't have made it more than 3000 ft
gstonegraphix 1 year ago
Newbie!
gstonegraphix 1 year ago
haha 180lb model rocket :D
edwinshap1 1 year ago
gee, that was a perfect flight! much better than some of my own little rockets that land ages away let alone loosing them! i am currently working on a aproximatley 1.8M tall rocket, although i dont know what engine i would use.PS im in australia and im 14 this year, dont know if you would need a lisence for that sort of size? please get back to me on that..
f22raptor861 1 year ago
@f22raptor861 yes you need to have a lisence to do that im also in this rocketry club at age 16 you have to be a level three or higher to launch this big
saluteshell5 1 year ago
@f22raptor861 first of all the motor would be larger then your rocket. you could use a G or F motor tho
456ner 3 months ago
Is the camera person standing on a beach ball ???
carlosmurphy4u 1 year ago
a tripod would be a good investment.
3fitzgrld 1 year ago 2
that is the first time i have ever seen a rocket land that close from where it were launched
siganarchy 2 years ago
A picture perfect flight for sure!!!
spacerock7 2 years ago
Damn that was a beautiful rocket! What motor was that... it had a hell of a long burn time
wpayton0034 2 years ago
It is an "O" Research Motor.
ZFamilyRockets 2 years ago