Balloon Recovery System

From Kwartzlab
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(What Other People Done)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Category:KwartzLab Space Program]]
 
[[Category:KwartzLab Space Program]]
 +
 +
= Materials =
 +
== Rip-Stop Nylon ==
 +
* ~$8/yd, from Lens Mill
 +
 +
= Parachute Design =
 +
* [http://www.pcprg.com/rocketre.htm Building a Model Rocket Parachute Recovery System]
  
 
= What Other People Done =
 
= What Other People Done =
Line 11: Line 18:
 
==1337arts==
 
==1337arts==
 
1337arts used a plastic parachute which they all ready had on hand for their first launch, and a trash bag for a second launch.
 
1337arts used a plastic parachute which they all ready had on hand for their first launch, and a trash bag for a second launch.
 
= Materials =
 
== Rip-Stop Nylon ==
 
* ~$8/yd, from Lens Mill
 

Revision as of 18:58, 11 March 2010


Contents

Materials

Rip-Stop Nylon

  • ~$8/yd, from Lens Mill

Parachute Design

What Other People Done

Most near-space launches I've found used commercially available parachutes. Those who built their own chutes haven't provided detailed information regarding how they designed or constructed the chutes. We may have to look further a-field.

BYU-Idaho

BYU-Idaho used a home-made chute for their first launch, without success: "...the parachute did not deploy very well. In fact, during a pre-flight test on launch day, the parachute was seen to deploy, then collapse. It is suspected that somehow, the parachute may have deployed partially, or not at all."

They also say the parachute was "[n]ot built according to any real standards, the parachute was our best attempt, and very little analysis and testing were put into its design"

1337arts

1337arts used a plastic parachute which they all ready had on hand for their first launch, and a trash bag for a second launch.

Personal tools
Navigation