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Recommended fin materials
Hey, I mostly lurk around here, I post occasionally, but now I've got a question for the experts here.
I'm building a semi-upscale of a Big Bertha out of a postal tube. Sandman is turning a nose cone for me, and I've got most every thing figured out but I can't decide on what to use for fins. I was thinking 1/8in aircraft ply, but thought I'd throw the question out there. Would 1/8in ply be over kill? I'm building this rocket for 24mm reloads, so the biggest motor it will see will be the F39, at until I can get the new 24/60 casing. I want it fairly tough, but not over board. I noticed that poplar plywood is cheaper than aircraft ply. Is it any good? Or will it will have knots and such? Thanks for any help.
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"Men and steel are alike. When they lose their temper they lose their worth." - Chuck Norris |
#2
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Since the original Big Bertha has 1/8" fins you may want to go a bit thicker for scale.
The upscale you are building is going to be heavy and those large fins sticking out are going to take some abuse on landing. For flight 3/16" balsa would work but I'd reccomend 3/16" lite ply (that's the poplar ply) at least or maybe aircraft ply (that's birch ply) which is a tad heavier. With an F39 you should still get an impressive altitude/
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"I'm a sandman. I've never killed anyone. I terminate runners when their time is up." Logan from "Logan's Run" http://sandmandecals.com/ |
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Thanks for answering.
I thought about making the fins scale, but since technically I'm measuring off of a Super Big Bertha, and its fins are 1/8in, and this is a 11% up scale, it not much of an increase. I'm really leaning towards the 1/8" aircraft ply now. I just need to find a good supplier (nearest hobby shop is more then 80 miles away) Again, thanks for everything
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"Men and steel are alike. When they lose their temper they lose their worth." - Chuck Norris |
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