Post your personal or team best here.
Post your team or personal best. To be displayed on the WRA2 standings page(Altimeter Data and Videos are optional)
Current WRA2 Single Stage Record Holder
Posts: 213
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 7:16 pm
Location: Galway, NY
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
It's one of our nicest videos. Enjoy!
WRA2 Member
Posts: 614
Joined: Sat Feb 24, 2007 10:06 am
WRA2 Member
Posts: 236
Joined: Wed Jan 31, 2007 12:13 pm
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
Team Enterprise
Current WRA2 Single Stage Record Holder
Posts: 213
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 7:16 pm
Location: Galway, NY
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
Mark Chen wrote:That's impressive. I can't believe how you were able to track that rocket all the way down. That thing had some serious hang-time. I had a question too. What's that buzzing whirling sound?
Thanks Mark! Glad you enjoyed the video.
First off, the parachute segment is only a fraction of the descent because we can't get good video of the rocket from so far down below. We never get good video of the first portion of the descent because the rocket is so far away it is too small for the camera to resolve unless set for maximum zoom. But, at max zoom it's impossible to hold the camera steady enough to frame the shot. We just keep the zoom in the middle until the rocket gets somewhat lower and becomes more visible in the viewfinder, only then can you zoom in close. When it drifts laterally as it comes down it also becomes easier to frame because the view is more oblique and not end-on, so there's more of the rocket to see. After a few launches it becomes easier to keep the rocket centered in the viewfinder once you have it in range. It just takes practice.
We had a clear sky with no clouds to confuse the focus and good light so we were able to spot the rocket sooner so we were able to tape a lot longer descent footage. Maybe the extra altitude gave so more time to drift and for us to see it too?
The sound you hear is just the compressor running we thought a few seconds more air pressure wouldn't hurt!
Trivia Question: Do you notice anything strange about the water in the bottom of the screen when you first see the onboard video view (just before it launches)? There's something in the water there. Know what that is?
Senior Member
Posts: 144
Joined: Thu Feb 01, 2007 3:21 pm
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
No matter where you go, there you are.
- Buckaroo Bansia
WRA2 Member
Posts: 982
Joined: Wed Jan 31, 2007 12:44 am
Location: Tilton, N.H.
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
U.S. Water Rockets wrote:Trivia Question: Do you notice anything strange about the water in the bottom of the screen when you first see the onboard video view (just before it launches)? There's something in the water there. Know what that is?
It's hard to tell, is it from the rocket? Maybe could it be soap bubbles or something you add to the reaction mass floating on the surface?
Captain, Team Enterprise
WRA2 Member
Posts: 236
Joined: Wed Jan 31, 2007 12:13 pm
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
U.S. Water Rockets wrote:Mark Chen wrote:That's impressive. I can't believe how you were able to track that rocket all the way down. That thing had some serious hang-time. I had a question too. What's that buzzing whirling sound?
Thanks Mark! Glad you enjoyed the video.
First off, the parachute segment is only a fraction of the descent because we can't get good video of the rocket from so far down below. We never get good video of the first portion of the descent because the rocket is so far away it is too small for the camera to resolve unless set for maximum zoom. But, at max zoom it's impossible to hold the camera steady enough to frame the shot. We just keep the zoom in the middle until the rocket gets somewhat lower and becomes more visible in the viewfinder, only then can you zoom in close. When it drifts laterally as it comes down it also becomes easier to frame because the view is more oblique and not end-on, so there's more of the rocket to see. After a few launches it becomes easier to keep the rocket centered in the viewfinder once you have it in range. It just takes practice.
We had a clear sky with no clouds to confuse the focus and good light so we were able to spot the rocket sooner so we were able to tape a lot longer descent footage. Maybe the extra altitude gave so more time to drift and for us to see it too?
The sound you hear is just the compressor running we thought a few seconds more air pressure wouldn't hurt!
Trivia Question: Do you notice anything strange about the water in the bottom of the screen when you first see the onboard video view (just before it launches)? There's something in the water there. Know what that is?
I wasn't talking about the compressor sound, I could tell what that was. I was asking about the sound in the onboard camera views. It's hard to hear at first but then when the rocket lands it gets pretty loud.
I have no clue what I'm looking at in the water. I can't think of anything that hasn't been guessed already.
Team Enterprise
Current WRA2 Single Stage Record Holder
Posts: 213
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 7:16 pm
Location: Galway, NY
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
The noise after splashdown is the camera picking up the radio signals from the telemetry transmitter. If the antenna touches the water the signals don't radiate away so the camera gets a dose of EM energy. Not a big deal.
WRA2 Member
Posts: 614
Joined: Sat Feb 24, 2007 10:06 am
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
U.S. Water Rockets wrote:Okay... the answer to the trivia question is: ICE! The water in the image has a thin ice sheet all around the shore where it's shallow. We had to chop through it to get our recovery boats deployed. The whole lake froze over within a day or two and that prevented us from trying again for the record.
The noise after splashdown is the camera picking up the radio signals from the telemetry transmitter. If the antenna touches the water the signals don't radiate away so the camera gets a dose of EM energy. Not a big deal.
Are you going to go after the record again now that it's springtime?
"What goes up, must come down"
WRA2 Member
Posts: 186
Joined: Sun Dec 31, 2006 12:40 am
Location: Seneca, N.Y.
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
WRA2 wrote:The new standings page is online.
http://wra2.org/WRA2_Standings.php
Suggestions are welcome.
Should there be different rocket categories for the personal best? I think I set the top height for an unreinforced single bottle. It went 467 feet! Perhaps there could be classes for 2l and 1.5l and spliced and multiple stage rockets?
Team Seneca
WRA2 Member
Posts: 982
Joined: Wed Jan 31, 2007 12:44 am
Location: Tilton, N.H.
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
Captain, Team Enterprise
WRA2 Member
Posts: 186
Joined: Sun Dec 31, 2006 12:40 am
Location: Seneca, N.Y.
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
Tim Chen wrote:Since this is just a list of personal best records I don't think we need to go into categories and stuff. If you want maybe just list the size and type of rocket in the list next to the altitude and leave categorization as an exersize for the reader?
Okie then, I would like to see a description or details column added to the "Personal Best" list. How about we make a chart with a few parameters in columns? This would be nice.
Team Seneca
WRA2 Member
Posts: 134
Joined: Wed Jan 31, 2007 6:39 pm
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
Floating amongst the clouds
Current WRA2 Flight Duration World Record Holder
Posts: 138
Joined: Fri Jan 11, 2008 3:19 pm
Location: Vught
Re: Post your personal or team best here.
We are gonna get higher
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