Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Vern Estes Birthday Blast

Estes is having a big Birthday Blast celebrating Vern Estes' 90th Birthday!
Birthday Wishes and rocketry photos are being collected for the party. CLICK HERE

Here's the picture I sent -

The first time I saw Vern Estes in person was like seeing a celebrity! This was from my first NARAM in 1975 in Orlando, Florida.
Someone said: "Abe Lincoln just walked into the room!" Another said: "That's Vern Estes, he has a beard now."
I thought: "That doesn't look like the crew cut Vern Estes I know from the catalog pictures."



On the Birthday web page is a picture of Ellis Langford, Bill Stine and Vern Estes.

Mr. Estes is holding an Orange Bullet rocket, an upcoming Estes kit. I build a couple Orange Bullets for Estes. I wonder if this was one that I built?

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 10, A Variation & A Fix

I understand different kit runs had different color fin cans.
Spray painting plastic fin cans can be a problem. Because I was making two models, I decided to leave one in the Eliminator yellow and paint the second in red as shown in the catalog.
The fin can was washed to remove any mold release.

The upper end was masked on the inside.
I didn't have any extra ST-13 tubing  so two wraps of masking tape was set on a masking wand dowel with the sticky side out. This was pressed on the inside of the fin can, used as a handle for spraying.
 
I knew this fin can wouldn't take the paint evenly.
On the left is the second coat after drying. The gloss is uneven.

I don't like using acrylic clear coats, if your painting technique is good you shouldn't need a clear coat. Besides that, clear coats get sticky in humid weather.
I gave in this time and used the Krylon clear gloss acrylic. On the right is the even gloss coat.

Monday, December 30, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 9, Finishing Up



The A, B, C, and D triangles fit on the lower adapter.
The straight sides were cut with a knife and straightedge, the curved bottom was cut with scissors. It took two re-draws to get the bottom curve correct.






TRIVIA: In the mid 1970s, Centuri kits had their silver coffin shaped shock cord mount. You laced a shock cord through three holes. While a great idea, those sticky backed mounts would release over time. In later instructions, Centuri would remind you to press the mount down with a pencil eraser before every launch.







I decided on another Centuri style shock cord mount. A shock cord is looped around a segment of tubing. This is glued in far enough to give room for the adapter shoulder.

Tools, The Essentials - Q-Tips

If you've followed the blog, you know I go through a lot of Q-tips.
I buy the cheap ones at the Dollar Tree Store, 350 for $1.00.

* I use them to pick up glue blobs, where my finger can't reach. They can only be used once, after the glue dries.
* Q-tips are great for working water and air bubbles out from under water slide decals.
* They make great touch-up brushes. Maybe not as good as a decent brush but do work in a pinch.
* The middle tubes are hollow plastic. They work as Micro Maxx launch lugs. These are plastic, so use an appropriate glue to attach to a body tube.
* I use them for the Kevlar shock cord guide tube on replaceable Kevlar engine mounts.

Sunday, December 29, 2019

I Wish They Wouldn't Do That - It'd Be Great If They Did This, SHROUDS & TEMPLATES

Eric Pelzer made a great comment on my post about single kit shrouds - 

"What would be really nice of vendors to do would be if they had all their printed sheets online as downloadable PDFs that ensured they printed to the proper size of the original. Ideally, all printed cards would fit on standard 8-1/2" x 11" pages or a legal size pages. Most of us scan them in, but, apparently, my scanning skills must not be good because they always seem to print just slightly off from the original."


Great idea!
It's great that most all instructions are available online now. I usually check them before ordering a kit. At Jim Zs and oldrocketplans,.com, sometimes the scanned PDFs are off or not clear enough to be used.

A note to anyone submitting instructions, fin patterns and card stock shrouds - 
PLEASE INCLUDE A 1" BLOCK or 1" MEASURE SPAN REFERENCE so we can check our home prints!

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 7, Prime and Paint Tubes and Balsa

Well, the blog posts are out of order - again! Yesterday got #8 when it should have been this one.

I had sanded to deep into the CWF filler and had to do more filling.
TIP: With the CWF filler you don't want to sand down too far, leave a very thin skin of the beige filler. If you see the pink balsa peeking through, you've sanded to far.

Here I'm using my sanding block to evenly sand the flat side of the adapter.







The paint on the body tubes was fine, I only had to re-paint the adapters.
The shoulders were taped together. I rolled some paper around the bottom for a handle to keep my hand out of the paint.
I didn't want any paint under the plastic fin can, the fit was tight enough already. The fin unit will slide on from the bottom. If you slid it down from the top (recommended in the instructions) you could scrape off paint down the length of the tube.

The fin unit was placed next to the body tube and marked to mask off the low end. Don't forget, that open area at the angled top of the  molded in launch lug will need paint coverage too. I masked below the open "U".

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Merry Christmas To Me!


I didn't order any clearance rockets in the recent Estes Black Friday sale - 
But I did pick up some discontinued Semroc kits! 
Four were $9.99, the Micro Max Orbital Transport was at retail price.
I've always wanted the Centuri Excalibur. The Wac Corporal was one of my first Estes kits, this one is bigger. The Midget will replace the one that staged, went horizontal and was lost in the trees. The Aerobee Hi is simply historic, the first mass produced model rocket kit.

I was tempted to get a Semroc (Estes) Scrambler for $19.99, but I rarely launch clusters.
These builds will probably be on the blog down the road.

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 8, Stick On Decor

The stick on decals were printed on some full sheet (8 1/2" X 11") self adhesive paper. 20 sheets were ordered through Ebay.
I used the same settings you would use for printing photographs so the ink color would be full and opaque.


Mark the centers of the bottoms of all the triangle pieces. Make small pencil marks. These tall triangles are difficult to set down straight. The center marks will really help with alignment.



The tallest triangles are centered directly over the fin leading edges.

TIP: Use your aluminum angle to draw a faint pencil line at the top of the triangle position. In the lower picture, the tip of the triangle is on that extended pencil line.



TIP: As with all stickers, lift and place them using the tip of your knife blade.
Line up the tic marks on the body tube with the center marks drawn on the bottom of the sticker.


Look close and you can see a center pencil mark on the ARGUS triangle. This lines up on a center mark made on the base of the fin.

ARGUS goes on the right side, the Centuri logo triangle goes on the facing left side.

Friday, December 27, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 6, Prepping The Fin Can


The old Centuri instructions tell you to "Prepare the fin unit before sliding it down over the lower body tube." You are directed to use the "enclosed sandpaper" to smooth the inside edge of the fin unit.
I don't remember ever seeing sandpaper included in a Centuri kit. The New Way square tube kits include sandpaper.
There can be some rough molding flash on the inside lip of the fin can. This could scratch the tube if left on the inside.



Run your finger around the inside lip and you'll feel some slight molding "ribs". I used some 400 grit wrapped around an engine casing to smooth them.

The front end of the can wasn't even. The 220 grit block flattened it out. I followed with 400 grit.




The top of the molded in launch lug was cleaned up with a diamond needle file.

The Centuri instructions say to slide the fin can down from the top - all the way down to the bottom.

TIP: With a little wiggling, I was able to slide it on from the bottom up. This is a good thing, I'm going to paint the body tube gloss white. The fin can fit is tight and could scratch the paint if slid down from the top.

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Fin Can From Thingverse

In a blog comment, Metalhead 1986 let me know:
"For those with 3D printers, the fin can is available on Thingiverse."

To go to the web page: CLICK HERE
Thanks to Jack Hydrazine for all the hard work.

The webpage also listed all the models that used this fin unit:
ENERJET: 1340 Sounding Rocket, 1340/20 Sounding Rocket
CENTURI: Phoenix Bird, Argus, M.A.R.S. Project
ESTES: Longshot, Maniac, Challenger II, Eliminator, Eliminator XL

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 5, Fitting The Balsa Parts



I like to clean up the shoulder bases on the nose cone and adapters. Not really necessary, just something I do.






The fit of the small nose cone was too loose for me. I'll have to build up the shoulder a little bit.







The adapter shoulder edges were rounded off.
To build them up and make the edges sharper, some CWF was brushed over the edge. The adjoining tube was slipped over and turned. This presses and forms the CWF leaving a raised lip that is sanded down after it has dried.


After the CWF and raised lip was sanded flat and even, it leaves a rough edge at the shoulder lip.

On the left it the lip edge before, on the right is the same edge lip after edge sanding, shown below. The difference is very subtle, but now has a better fit.


To clean up the edge, set the adapter or nose cone into the tube, almost to the lip edge, leaving a gap. Fold a piece of 400 grit in half and set in the gap. Lightly sand around the edge and check the fit. Repeat if needed.
This takes off any roughness and squares up the lip.

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Merry Christmas - Y'all!

Reprinted from 2010 -

OH, ROCKET - TREE
Space Modeling Parody of Oh, Christmas Tree
Oh, Rocket-tree Oh, Rocket-tree,
How lovely is thy smoke trail,
Oh, Rocket-tree Oh, Rocket-tree,
Fly Vertically without fail.

With C6-3, we’ll rubberneck,
At peak of flight, a rear eject,

Oh, Rocket-tree Oh, Rocket-tree
It landed close - oh whoo-o-pee.

"But I heard him exclaim, as he drove out of sight,
"Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good flight."


"Say, little Bobby, Did you get a Wedgie for Christmas?"

The Wedgie is an OOP Odd'l Rockets kit that had available skins to fit the triangle sides.

Tools, The Essentials - Sharpies!

Sharpies have turned out to be a valuable multi-purpose tool.

Fine Point Sharpies can be used to outline difficult black masking jobs, like the corrugation on the Saturn V.
If your sprayed black paint didn't quite cover the leading edge of a fin, you can run a wider point Sharpie over it. You'll only see the touch-up in bright direct sunlight.

The back white barrel of the pen body is a perfect burnisher. It's great for pressing down detail parts and forming card stock shrouds. (Just be aware of the black print on the white barrel - It could rub off on your finish!)

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 4, Engine Mount Gussets

The outside diameter of the rings was a little small. I decided to add some balsa gussets for a better fit and a stronger mount.

Scrap balsa was cut to the width between the centering rings.
The glue fillets already in place didn't allow the balsa gusset to slide all the way to the engine mount tube. I sanded the corners off to fit over the fillets.

 A strip of copy paper was wrapped around the tube. After being cut to size, it was folded in thirds and marked. The mark locations were transferred to the engine mount tube.

The gusset pieces were cut wider than needed and glued to the 120 degree marks, with two centered around the engine hook.




The gusset sides were sanded to allow a slip fit into the ST-13 (BT-56) lower tube.
While the fit of the mount is much better, I still have build up the outside diameter of the centering rings with a bead of glue before gluing it into the tube. The gussets add a lot of strength to the mount.

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 3, Centering Rings


I used Centuri ST-7 for an engine mount tube. It's a little larger diameter than an Estes BT-20. The only engine blocks I have fit the BT-20.
I did two wraps of copy paper applied with a glue stick to fit the slightly wider tube.



I didn't know that the original kit had foam core centering rings. These were probably more robust than an regular centering ring at .050" thick.
The instructions say these rings are stronger and don't require a black coupler tube.


TRIVIA: Years back, all Estes and Centuri kits had black fish paper couplers between centering rings. Now most kits have just the two rings that center the engine tube in the larger tube.
If you ever tried to glue in one of these older style mounts, they would sometimes freeze in the wrong spot, not slid all the way into the main air frame tube! Maybe that's one reason they are no longer used in engine mounts. (That, and the vendor probably saves a nickel per kit.)




I'm making two Argus models so I needed to notch four rings for two engine mounts.

TIP: You can make the notch sizes consistent by stacking the rings and cutting with a sharp blade.

Monday, December 23, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 2, Stick On Decor

There will be two Argus kit clones.
Why two? I had two Estes Eliminator kits in the build pile. I'm not fond of the yellow and purple Eliminator colors. Why not make something more interesting?
Too much time was spent redrawing the stickers to only use them once.
I have quite a few unopened kits, just trying to thin the herd.




Here's a scan of the original peel and stick decor pieces from Jim Z's.
All the long triangular pieces butt up against each other, side by side. It looks like the cuts down the thick black lines (die-cut, separating the pieces) aren't perfectly centered.

I could certainly print these and use it on the model, but I wanted a something cleaner without the die-cut shadow lines.










I worked in Corel Draw and came up with separate triangles I could cut with a knife and straightedge. Doing this myself made the build more worthwhile.
It's not an exact copy of the original art. Look close at the Centuri logos, the Centuri letters aren't black. It was changed so I'll recognize it if it shows up somewhere else, in a clone kit or online.
I ordered some 8 1/2" X 11" self  adhesive sheets from Ebay
.
Drawing and printing your own decals or wraps is always a crap shoot. While the tall triangles should be fine, that roll pattern on the upper left could take some re-sizing to perfectly roll around the upper ST-7 tube.

If youare a member through Patreon and would like a copy, email me at oddlrockets@bellsouth.net
and request the Argus Stick-On Decals.
This re-drawn art is meant for a single clone build, not for commercial kit production.

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Part 1, Parts


The body tubes, adapters, nose cone and centering rings were ordered from Semroc. The fin unit came from an Estes Eliminator kit I had. I've already built an Enerjet 1340 and a few Centuri Phoenix Birds so the Argus was the next best choice. The screw eye for the lower adapter isn't shown.
Parts of interest:
That one piece plastic fin can. The Centuri Argus catalog page showed it in red, but I understand it could show up in different colors.

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Centuri Argus #KB-9, Build, Background Research






The Centuri Argus was an A.T.R.F. (Almost Ready To Fly) model that used the molded one-piece plastic fin can from the Enerjet 1340 model. This fin unit was revolutionary. Strong and flexible with a launch lug molded between two of the four fins. The Argus was produced from 1973 - 1981.
The Centuri Phoenix Bird and later Estes kits used this fin can. Two that come to mind are the Maniac and Eliminator.
To see this Centuri catalog page, CLICK HERE





Jay Goemmer ("Centuri Guy" on the forums) has put together a great listing of Centuri kit parts. This includes nose cones and body tube lengths for almost all the Centuri line. To see the list: CLICK HERE
This gave me the correct sizes and lengths of the older Centuri ST tubing, nose cone and adapters for the Argus.


The above example shows just a small part of the 14 pages of Centuri kit information. A valuable source for clone builds. Thanks Jay!
Nose cones and body tubes were ordered from erockets.biz, currently the only source for Centuri diameter tubes.

Friday, December 20, 2019

Semroc V2 Build, Finished















The V2 was the first kit I was attracted to looking through that first Estes catalog in 1969. I've built a few larger ones since then.
When this build was started a few years ago, a Kevlar loop was attached to the tail cone. I ended up using a tri-fold mount and some 1/8" wide elastic for a shock cord. A 12" Odd'l Rockets parachute was tied on.

This was a tough mask, made harder because the model is smaller.
Those diagonal strips should have been a little narrower. I'm leaving it as is.
The number "47" decals are yet to be made. The 47s go on the fins in the white horizontal bars.
The finished look is interesting and different from the paint patterns usually seen.

Semroc V2 Build, Part 13, Trim Stripes




I used my favorite black trim material - Contact Paper blackboard covering. It's cheap and a roll will probably last a lifetime.

After the first width is cut, the ends are lifted and stuck back down a little to the right. The others are cut using this as visual guide width.
This White Sands roll pattern is seen on other V2s.

The bottom of the diagonal starts above the leading edge tip of the fin. The upper end is at the midpoint between two fins.
The trickiest part is getting the strips set down in a straight line. Look from the back of the model to make sure the lines are straight, not set on a slight curve.

The long zig-zag pattern is trimmed at the tail cone / tube joint and the bottom of the tube extension.

There are still a decal to be printed, the number "47" that sets on the horizontal white strip on the fins. This will have to wait until I do some kit decal productions.

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Semroc V2 Build, Part 12, Fix!


Why post mistakes, assembly and paint problems? We're all in the same boat, mishaps happen to all of us. Hopefully there are lessons learned that lead to a better build the next time around.

Here's where I was left after pulling the simple around the tube mask. I've seen this before, metallic paints don't stick as well as normal paint. They lift easier and can tear along the mask line.
I didn't want to sand the entire upper extension, then go back to spraying the white and silver again.

I masked off the white to protect it right on the silver mask line with brown masking tape. This is only to protect the white surface while the rough silver edge is smoothed down. I only have to sand the area around the tear. Metallic paint over spraying blends well.


Scotch tape mask went right on the previous line. This was followed by brown tape and copy paper below it.






Whew!
This time I got a clean mask.
Time to glue the extension tube on over the coupler.