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This page is a collection of photographs and stories about my friend Scott
Carter. Scott and I started flying rockets together in 1994 when Scott
was only 10 years old. Scott has now graduated from the University of
Idaho with a degree in computer science. |
| Click on any photo to see a larger version of it. |
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Rocket
Name: Top Gun
Length: 7 feet, 8
inches
Diameter: 7.5
inches
Weight: 26 lbs
w/o motor
Scott Carter
stands next to his Top
Gun rocket. It has six fins. It also has two Missile Works RRC2
altimeters and is configured for dual deployment. (Drogue and main.)
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Scott installs
an igniter into the K700 motor in his Top Gun rocket. |
 Photo by Scott Carter |
Scott
launched the Top Gun on its maiden flight at the Tripoli Idaho SpudRoc-6 launch on May
19, 2001. The K700 white lightning motor gave it quite a boost. |
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Scott also launched his
Top Gun at the site near Brothers Oregon in June 2001. This
flight was also on a K700 motor. |
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Rocket: Super Thug
Length:
5 feet, 6
inches
Diameter: 7.5
inches
Weight:
14 lbs
w/o motor
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| Scott launched his Super Thug on a
J350 in July 2002 at the Brothers Oregon site. It's a pretty big
rocket for a J350 so it made for a really nice "low" and "slow" flight.
The lift off was perfectly vertical and the rocket did a nice slow roll as
it climbed to all of 800-1000 feet. Great flight! It was
really fun to watch. |
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Photo by
Richie Boltizar
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Photo by Richie Boltizar |
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The Super Thug is supposed to
return with two main sections coming down under separate parachutes.
Unfortunately, during deployment the two chutes got tangled, and it all came
down together. However, it was all safe and sound and it landed within
25 feet of the LCO table. |
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Scott puts his BSD Horizon on
the pad at Brothers Oregon in July 2002 Scott launched the BSD Horizon
on an I218R-M redline motor. Good flight! |
 Photo by Nadine
Kinney |
Scott prepares his
rocket named "Sonic" for launch at Black Rock Desert on Oct. 6,
2001. Sonic is a minimum diameter (54mm) rocket that Scott built
specifically to fly past the speed of sound. It weighed 8 pounds
and 5 ounces when loaded with a K700 motor. The airframe was covered with Kevlar
and fiberglass. The fins were G-10 and glassed onto the
airframe. It used a Missile Works RRC2 altimeter for dual
deployment. Preflight simulations showed that Sonic should exceed 16,000
feet and have a peak speed of Mach 1.5. (1100 MPH). There is
video of this launch available here. |
 Photo
by Nadine Kinney |
Sonic lift off!
To see the video click right here.
Unfortunately a coupler suffered a
structural failure when the rocket reached max Q. The moral
of the story is to reinforce couplers just as strong as the rest of the
airframe! |
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By July 2002 Scott had repaired
the Sonic and was ready to fly it at the Brothers Oregon site. Only
now it's known as Subsonic. That's because it is now shorter and will no
longer accommodate the longer 54mm motors. He also had to eliminate
the altimeter section and it now uses motor ejection for deployment. |
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Scott launched his Subsonic on
an I161-M at the Brothers Oregon site on July 20, 2002. Good boost,
but the delay was a little too short and the parachute suffered some damage.
Otherwise the rest of the rocket was fine. The Kevlar airframe makes
this rocket so tough it could probably just use a small streamer and
recover without damage. |
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Rocket Name:
Super Thug
Length:
5 feet, 6 inches
Diameter: 7.5
inches
Weight:
17 lbs with K550 motor.
Scott's
Super Thug is a scratch built 2x upscale of the classic Binder Design
"Thug" kit. Scott launched it on a K550 for a great flight
at the Tripoli Idaho SpudRoc-5 launch on May 20, 2000.
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Photo by Nadine Kinney |
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Rocket Scientist at work.
Scott is repairing some landing
damage on the Super Thug that occurred at LDRS-18 (Argonia
Kansas). The famous Kansas wind dragged the rocket on the
ground and the dirt clods in the field damaged the air frame.
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 Photo
by
Nadine Kinney |
Scott is installing
an igniter into the motor while I hold up his Super Thug on the launch
rod. This was at LDRS-17 at the Bonneville Salt Flats. |
 Photo by
Nadine Kinney |
Super Thug launch on a K550
motor at LDRS-17 on the Salt Flats. Nice flight, nice recovery. Just
for fun the Super Thug carried three Idaho potatoes for nose weight.
Aug. 9, 1998.
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Scott with his
standard size Thug at LDRS-17 on the Salt Flats
Scott almost always launches the little Thug on an H97 black jack motor.
As usual it had a great flight and nice recovery. |
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Scott with is Super Thug at the
LDRS-16 launch at Hartsel, Colorado on Aug 9, 1997. He had a great
flight on a J350 motor that day. |
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The next day Scott flew The Super Thug on a K550
for another perfect flight. It landed out near the grazing
buffalo! Fortunately Scott retrieved it without incident.
Although we both learned that buffalo make a very strange sound when they
are concerned about someone approaching a little too close for comfort. |
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Scott at LDRS-16
with both of his "Thugs". (1997) |
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Scott with his
smaller Thug at Black Rock 2000. |

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Scott with his first
place trophy from LDRS-16 for closest to 5000 feet without going
over. (1997) Scott used some real rocket science to win that
contest. He built a PML
Cirrus specifically for the contest. He used wRASP for simulations
and figured out that an H123 motor would get him pretty close.
Unfortunately his first few flights were slightly too high and were above
5000 feet. However, using the actual altitudes from the first
flights, he was then able to "calibrate" the drag coefficient in
wRASP, so that wRASP would predict exactly the same as the actual altitudes. Once wRASP was properly calibrated, he then used it to figure out
how much weight to add to the rocket so that it should reach 4950 feet. (Giving
just a little bit of margin for error and still be under 5000 feet.) The result was 2.5 oz. He
added the weight to the Cirrus and launched it again on another H123.
This time the altimeter
reported 4955 feet! (Closer agreement than could possibly be
expected, but it's true!) And since this was within 45 feet of the
5000 foot target, and since no one was able to better it, he won first place and
received both a trophy and a LOC/Precision Top Gun kit. Well done Scott! |
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Scott also flew his
Cirrus during LDRS-17 at Bonneville Salt Flats on an H123W motor but only reached 4705 feet.
The flight was less than perfectly vertical. (Aug,
1998.) |
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Scott at Black Rock in
August of 1996. This was the first time Scott flew an H97 black
jack motor in his Thug. |
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Scott holding an
M1315 motor at Black Rock 2000.
You got plans for that Scott?
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