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Reward! Please help if you can!
I was at the launch yesterday (7/26) at Bong and sent up my Binder Design Velociraptor. Was only to go up about 2,300 ft., drogue and then deploy the main at 800 feet. It went JUST far enough over that it landed in the tall brush just before a small clump of trees and a line of bushes. I made three trips out to trudge through the brush to find it and finally had to quit. I live in Deerfield, WI, so I'm quite a ways off. If anyone is inclined to help a fellow club member out and give it a shot looking for this expensive rocket, I would be eternally grateful -- I'd pay a nice reward for it! Below is a pic of the rocket and a hand-drawn map of where everyone saw it go down.
Thank you! PS - I would have had a tracker on it, but I didn't know the club had them to loan out until it was too late... http://forums.rocketshoppe.com/atta...tid=41593&stc=1 http://forums.rocketshoppe.com/atta...tid=41594&stc=1
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"I've never understood the female capacity to avoid a direct answer to any question." ~ Spock Woosh NAR #558 Last edited by Kevin Huddleston : 07-27-2015 at 12:17 PM. |
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This is the kind of situation where I wish the club owned a nice quadcopter with onboard video - so we could have someone fly it over an area and look down into the brush from above. Bet we'd spot stuff faster...
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Dean Fox NAR #53946SR ---- "Wherever you go, there you are" |
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That's funny you say that as I was thinking the same thing yesterday, "Man, if I could just get some height and look down, I bet I'd spot it!" If anyone finds it, even if rain has ruined the cardboard tubing, I still would like to have it for everything else on it that won't be ruined. Thanks
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"I've never understood the female capacity to avoid a direct answer to any question." ~ Spock Woosh NAR #558 |
#4
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Perfect application for one! In the 90s we flew up in Walden, Colorado, in the mountains. It was a large valley surrounded by mountains, and was covered with sage brush. You could lose a rocket in that stuff easily, if the rocket and chute went down in between plants, even if you had a pretty good bearing on it. You might not see it until you were practically on top of it. A quadcopter would have been perfect to overfly the suspected location.
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Lee Reep NAR 55948 Projects: Semroc Saturn 1B, Ken Foss Designs Mini Satellite Interceptor In the Paint Shop: Nothing! Too cold! Launch-Ready: Farside-X, Maxi Honest John, Super Scamp |
#5
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I bet. I wish I had one! I'm just sick about this... $200 rocket + $40 altimeter... Ugh....
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"I've never understood the female capacity to avoid a direct answer to any question." ~ Spock Woosh NAR #558 |
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Do you know which way is North on your map? And what colors are the parachutes?
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Never trust an atom. They make up everything. 4 out of 3 people struggle with math. Chemically, alcohol IS a solution. NAR# 94042 SAM# 0078 |
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Thanks for asking! The approximate area coordinates are 42.624476, -88.163757. On my map, the launch area is East to West, so the area where this rocket landed is SW of the landing site. Does that make sense?
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"I've never understood the female capacity to avoid a direct answer to any question." ~ Spock Woosh NAR #558 |
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