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steamer October 5th 11 09:18 PM

Speaking of air races...
 
--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/

--
"Steamboat Ed" Haas : Steel, Stainless, Titanium:
Hacking the Trailing Edge! : Guaranteed Uncertified Welding!
www.nmpproducts.com
---Decks a-wash in a sea of words---

Richard[_9_] October 5th 11 09:41 PM

Speaking of air races...
 
On 10/5/2011 3:18 PM, steamer wrote:
--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/


They have been talking about it for many years.
But I doubt it will ever be a public event.

Larry Jaques[_4_] October 6th 11 01:15 AM

Speaking of air races...
 
On 05 Oct 2011 20:18:23 GMT, steamer wrote:

--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/


YEAH!

--
We are always the same age inside.
-- Gertrude Stein

J. Clarke[_2_] October 7th 11 02:17 AM

Speaking of air races...
 
In article ,
says...

--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/

My God, the Marching Morons are here.

If you haven't read that novel, you should. One feature is very noisy
slow "rockets", a description which fits these aircraft.



Richard[_9_] October 7th 11 03:03 AM

Speaking of air races...
 
On 10/6/2011 8:17 PM, J. Clarke wrote:
In ,
says...

--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/

My God, the Marching Morons are here.

If you haven't read that novel, you should. One feature is very noisy
slow "rockets", a description which fits these aircraft.



They are not THAT loud, J.
A pulse jet is that loud.

But these guys are basically just small rocket powered winged aircraft.
(Mostly Long-EZs)

But you got the "slow" part right. At least for rockets.
They have the same airframe limits as a piston/propeller powered EZ.
Roughly 180 MPH or so.




J. Clarke[_2_] October 7th 11 03:58 AM

Speaking of air races...
 
In article ,
says...

On 10/6/2011 8:17 PM, J. Clarke wrote:
In ,

says...

--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/

My God, the Marching Morons are here.

If you haven't read that novel, you should. One feature is very noisy
slow "rockets", a description which fits these aircraft.



They are not THAT loud, J.
A pulse jet is that loud.

But these guys are basically just small rocket powered winged aircraft.
(Mostly Long-EZs)

But you got the "slow" part right. At least for rockets.
They have the same airframe limits as a piston/propeller powered EZ.
Roughly 180 MPH or so.


Did you read the writeup?

"X-Racers are powered by a rocket engine that emits a long flame and a
thunderous roar heard and felt for miles."






Richard[_9_] October 7th 11 04:16 AM

Speaking of air races...
 
On 10/6/2011 9:58 PM, J. Clarke wrote:
In ,
says...

On 10/6/2011 8:17 PM, J. Clarke wrote:
In ,

says...

--Does anyone know when these folks are going to get their ****
together and start racing? This I want to see...
http://www.rocketracingleague.com/

My God, the Marching Morons are here.

If you haven't read that novel, you should. One feature is very noisy
slow "rockets", a description which fits these aircraft.



They are not THAT loud, J.
A pulse jet is that loud.

But these guys are basically just small rocket powered winged aircraft.
(Mostly Long-EZs)

But you got the "slow" part right. At least for rockets.
They have the same airframe limits as a piston/propeller powered EZ.
Roughly 180 MPH or so.


Did you read the writeup?

"X-Racers are powered by a rocket engine that emits a long flame and a
thunderous roar heard and felt for miles."
\


I've heard the engines myself.
(what I can hear of anything anymore)

Yeah, they are a bit loud, but not that much.
(sometimes being deaf is a good thing!)

I heard the shuttle launch from 75 miles away once.
IT wasn't very loud either :)
At 75 miles!






Richard[_9_] October 7th 11 04:20 AM

Speaking of air races...
 
The nosiest thing I ever heard wasn't all that "loud".

It was an RC model jet engine.

Even with ear plugs (the owner passed them out like candy) and
my Micky Mouse ears, at 120,000 rpm, with all the harmonics anyone
ever dreamed of, that sucker made your teeth crawl.



Steve B[_10_] October 7th 11 05:09 AM

Speaking of air races...
 

"Richard" wrote in message
m...
The nosiest thing I ever heard wasn't all that "loud".

It was an RC model jet engine.

Even with ear plugs (the owner passed them out like candy) and
my Micky Mouse ears, at 120,000 rpm, with all the harmonics anyone
ever dreamed of, that sucker made your teeth crawl.


One time many many years ago in another universe, I got a call from a German
accented person wanting me to do some welding, and in a hurry. He brought a
section of what appeared to be an antenna tower to my shop. I welded some
simple things that had been damaged in shipping.

I asked what it was for. He said it was a launch platform for a copy of a
buzz bomb replica that they were flying at Eldorado dry lake, near Boulder
City, Nevada at the big RC plane convention. I went.

At that time, before bureaucracy, there were huge three and four day events
on that dry lake. Lots of RVs, tents, and campers. Lots and lots of all
sorts of RC stuff, some of it quite large. This rocket was about ten feet
long, and a six to eight foot wingspan. It was an exact smaller replica.
There were thousands of other RC planes, some quite large. Some multi
engined. A lot of them got "snuffed", and were brought back in pieces by
the retrieval crews.

The ramp was powered actually, by long bands of surgical tubing. The flat
bar rails were greased. Elegantly simple.

Now to start the pulse jet. It took them about ten minutes, fiddling with
this, then that. It would start, then die. Start then die. Then they got
it fired and it stayed lit. They revved it up and held it. An odd sound,
not any whine like I expected, or any roar like a jet. Just that putt putt
putt pop pop pop........ They pulled the trip, and it went up the ramp and
into the sky. It flew way farther around than any radio controlled plane at
the meet.

They must have had a powerful radio on it, as it went to the edges of out of
sight. They buzzed the crowd low and FAST. Back and forth, all around, way
up. It was something. Then in for a nice landing.

Circus Circus doesn't sponsor those big meets any more because Boulder City
annexed the land, and put all kinds of rules on land use on the dry lake.
Thank you, bureaucrats. Circus Circus does still have some VERY large
warehouses that they house their fleet of various racing machines in.

It was sure nice to witness that buzz bomb replica. In flight.

Steve



[email protected] October 8th 11 02:11 PM

Speaking of air races...
 
On Oct 6, 6:09*pm, "Steve B" wrote:
"Richard" wrote in message

m...

The nosiest thing I ever heard wasn't all that "loud".


It was an RC model jet engine.


Even with ear plugs (the owner passed them out like candy) and
my Micky Mouse ears, at 120,000 rpm, with all the harmonics anyone
ever dreamed of, that sucker made your teeth crawl.


One time many many years ago in another universe, I got a call from a German
accented person wanting me to do some welding, and in a hurry. *He brought a
section of what appeared to be an antenna tower to my shop. *I welded some
simple things that had been damaged in shipping.

I asked what it was for. *He said it was a launch platform for a copy of a
buzz bomb replica that they were flying at Eldorado dry lake, near Boulder
City, Nevada at the big RC plane convention. *I went.

At that time, before bureaucracy, there were huge three and four day events
on that dry lake. *Lots of RVs, tents, and campers. *Lots and lots of all
sorts of RC stuff, some of it quite large. *This rocket was about ten feet
long, and a six to eight foot wingspan. *It was an exact smaller replica.
There were thousands of other RC planes, some quite large. *Some multi
engined. *A lot of them got "snuffed", and were brought back in pieces by
the retrieval crews.

The ramp was powered actually, by long bands of surgical tubing. *The flat
bar rails were greased. *Elegantly simple.

Now to start the pulse jet. *It took them about ten minutes, fiddling with
this, then that. *It would start, then die. *Start then die. *Then they got
it fired and it stayed lit. *They revved it up and held it. *An odd sound,
not any whine like I expected, or any roar like a jet. *Just that putt putt
putt pop pop pop........ *They pulled the trip, and it went up the ramp and
into the sky. *It flew way farther around than any radio controlled plane at
the meet.

They must have had a powerful radio on it, as it went to the edges of out of
sight. *They buzzed the crowd low and FAST. *Back and forth, all around, way
up. *It was something. *Then in for a nice landing.

Circus Circus doesn't sponsor those big meets any more because Boulder City
annexed the land, and put all kinds of rules on land use on the dry lake.
Thank you, bureaucrats. *Circus Circus does still have some VERY large
warehouses that they house their fleet of various racing machines in.

It was sure nice to witness that buzz bomb replica. *In flight.

Steve


That would have been cool.
Karl


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