Hi,
Looking for a tutorial to make a reliable parachute mechanism for a class D rocket, any recommendations?
Best Parachute Mechanism
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Re: Best Parachute Mechanism
Gosh, there are many ways to do this. I've been dabbling with a mechanical mechanism that senses when the rocket is falling nose-down -- just drawing so far, haven't built it yet (it needs some 3D printed parts). I've been using an Eggtimer altimeter controlling a micro-server that pulls two pins to release the nose cone. There's a similar concept mechanism in this tutorial: -- and there's a side-deploy mechanism described here:
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Re: Best Parachute Mechanism
Thanks.
I have come up with an idea similar to the one seen in the second video you have linked, except involving an internal release as opposed to the elastic band around the outside. Additionally my system would involve an arduino, an altimeter and a servo. However my concern is the weight of the batteries needed to power the arduino; I think 2 AAAs would be fine but I'm unsure, I can't seem to find a concrete answer on it.
I have come up with an idea similar to the one seen in the second video you have linked, except involving an internal release as opposed to the elastic band around the outside. Additionally my system would involve an arduino, an altimeter and a servo. However my concern is the weight of the batteries needed to power the arduino; I think 2 AAAs would be fine but I'm unsure, I can't seem to find a concrete answer on it.
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Re: Best Parachute Mechanism
Look for posts by the current class D record holder. That rocket uses a wind-up Tomy timer that releases a rubber band, and it's all internal.
You need sufficient power for your altimeter and the servos, as well as the servo controller if your altimeter doesn't have it built in. 2 AAAs won't do it. Some altimeters take a 9V battery. You generally need lithium-polymer (LiPo) batteries. Lithium batteries are light. Mine is a 7.4V LiPo. You can see a picture of my battery + servo + altimeter in this post: http://www.wra2.org/forum/viewtopic.php ... mer#p19350 -- I recall that battery is about 15g.
You need sufficient power for your altimeter and the servos, as well as the servo controller if your altimeter doesn't have it built in. 2 AAAs won't do it. Some altimeters take a 9V battery. You generally need lithium-polymer (LiPo) batteries. Lithium batteries are light. Mine is a 7.4V LiPo. You can see a picture of my battery + servo + altimeter in this post: http://www.wra2.org/forum/viewtopic.php ... mer#p19350 -- I recall that battery is about 15g.
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Re: Best Parachute Mechanism
I'll have a look through the forums, can you recall his handle?
Apologies I meant accelerometer not altimeter. 15g would be absolutely ideal i'll try and locate one.
Apologies I meant accelerometer not altimeter. 15g would be absolutely ideal i'll try and locate one.
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Re: Best Parachute Mechanism
Handle is Retrotec29. See his class D submission at http://www.wra2.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=2996 which has some nice pictures of rocket details. There's also a video further down showing a parachute deployment test.