Water Rocket Manual: Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Water Rockets and Launchers
Water Rocket Manual: Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Water Rockets and Launchers
Water Rocket Manual: Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Water Rockets and Launchers
Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Water Rockets and Launchers
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It is Newtons laws at work and especially his third law of motion simply stated as
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
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A bottle rocket has four or five phases of flight as opposed to three for chemical
rockets.
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1. Acceleration due to pressure acting against the launch tube. (This is not
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depending on the overall empty weight of the rocket and whether or not a launch
tube is used. The graph below shows a 2 liter bottle rocket weighing 150 grams
and 250 grams, using a launch tube and not, and with a fairly large drag
coefficient for an example. For this rocket, the optimal amount of water with a
launch tube is 22% for 150-gram rocket weight, 30% for a 250-gram, and without
a launch tube is 29% for 150-gram one, and 37% for a 250-gram rocket.
So you can see that the more the rocket weighs, the more water it needs to
reach the maximum altitude and the longer the launch rod, the less water it
needs. Also notice that with a launch tube, actually the heavier rocket reaches a
higher altitude. That is because by using the pressure working against the launch
tube, the launch tube can impart a greater momentum so the inertia will carry it
farther. It combines the affect of a bullet in a gun and a rocket motor. You can
find more details on this in the Science and Math chapter.
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There are other factors involved any reasons why you may want more than
the optimum amount of water. This and many other topics are covered in
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Ho w a L a u n c h e r Wo rk s
The Basics
The minimum requirements for a launcher are:
A way to pressurize the bottle
A seal to hold the water and pressure in the bottle until it is launched
A way to keep the rocket from launching until there is enough pressure
As stated before, there are as many designs for launchers as people using them.
However, if we just consider the most common and popular launcher types, we
can divide them into these categories:
Hand Held
Friction Plugs
Latched
Launch Tubes
Hand Held
A hand held launcher is sealed some way, usually an o-ring, and is held on the
launcher by hand as pressure is increased by an air pump. To launch, the person
holding the bottle on the launcher merely lets go.
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Friction Plugs
These are the simplest form of launcher and are comprised simply of a cork or
rubber stopper with a tube through it or a tire valve plugging the nozzle throat
whether it is just the bottle neck or a hole in a cap. A tire pump or pressurized
gas supply is attached directly to the tube or tire valve or indirectly with a longer
hose. The bottle is then pressurized and at some point where the pressure in the
bottle overcomes the friction fit, the plug is blown out of the bottle and the
bottle is launched.
Although this is the simplest method, the pressure at which the plug is blown out
is very unpredictable. It could happen at 30 psi or 200 psi (which is likely to burst
the bottle).
A rocket that is sitting flat on the ground on its fins may launch straight but may
not. Any irregularities in thrust, off centered center of gravity, or nonsymmetrical features on the outside of the rocket such as non-identical fins or
adhesive can affect the initial direction the rocket will fly. For consistency an
external guide rod will be required to insure a straight flight. A guide rod guides
the rocket straight in the first few feet of its flight until the air flow over the fins
is sufficient for them to take over that job.
Latched
The latched type of launcher overcomes the unpredictability of the friction plug
type by holding the bottle securely until it is ready to launch. When the desired
pressure is reached (assuming a pressure gage is in the system), the bottle is
unlatched and launches. As with the friction plug, this kind of launcher still needs
an external guide rod for a stable flight.
Launch Tube
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The launch tube fits through the neck of the bottle almost to the top of the
bottle on the inside. The launch tube system in its simplest form can be made
without a latch but it has to have a seal, usually an o-ring. The more common
launch tube launchers also have a latch that is remotely tripped. Either way, it
overcomes both problems. It is launched when desired rather than at a random
point and the launch tube, which runs up inside the bottle, guides the rocket
straight eliminated the need for an external guide. It also adds considerable
additional velocity and so higher maximum altitude.
The Simplest Launch Tube Launcher Hand Held
The simplest launch tube launcher without a latch actually does have a latch
you. One person can pump while another holds the rocket on the launch tube.
For one person use, a foot pump, electric compressor or gas cylinder could be
used. A compressor would have to be protected from the water.
When ready to launch, the person holding on to the rocket simply lets go. This
should only be used at lower pressures far below the burst pressure of the bottle,
40 to 50 psi max. This launcher should also be tall enough so that the bottle is
overhead just in case the bottle does burst, the person holding it is out of the
way of the blast. In the case of children, different heights of launch tubes
would have to be made for the different heights of the kids.
Kids especially may enjoy this because the person holding the bottle DEFINITELY
GET WET! This can be a big source of fun and laughter besides being a very
simple launcher to build.
C opyright: 2 0 1 2 J ac obs O nline, L L C
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