air.command wrote:Hi GFT, interesting project. What do you hope to achieve with the gyro setup? Are you trying to get the rocket to fly straight? Or do you wish to use it to sense apogee? Just going off the photo, I'm guessing you are trying to get the rocket to fly straight (the gyro's spin axis appears fixed). If that's the case you'll probably find that it doesn't quite work the way you intend. This is because a gyro's input axis is at 90 degrees to its output axis. So a disturbance on the rocket say coming from the north will cause the rocket to veer east. If you are trying to stabilise your rocket using a gyro you may want to consider putting it in a free moving gimball and then cross link the output to control flaps on your fins at 90 degrees. This way the rocket will react in the right direction. I have seen several attempts of people using gyros on water rockets. The biggest problem I've seen is in the sensitivity of the systems to damage from launch and landings. Make sure you build yours strong enough to withstand these. Good luck with the build.
- George
George, I've heard this argument before, but I'm not sure if it's quite complete. I'm just taking this material in a mechanics class right now, and I haven't looked at this particular problem in detail, but here's how I understand it. The gyro in the rocket will act just like a top spinning on a table. If the rocket is naturally unstable then a small deviation from being vertical will result in a torque which tends to amplify that deviation. Now, the gyro doesn't simply create an opposite torque as some people might think, but it causes the rocket to precess about the vertical axis, rather than simply rotate about the axis of the torque. Ie, the rocket won't tend to line up perfectly with the vertical, but the axis of the rocket will likely make some small angle with the vertical and it will precess about the vertical. Similar to a spinning top which isn't spinning perfectly. It's not quite how most people think it works, but I think it could theoretically keep the rocket "straight enough".
I might be wrong, but I've never seen any actual analysis of what would happen with a gyro in a rocket, and just thought people might actually be over simplifying it.
Alex