Posted 12 January 2004 - 01:39 AM
Do not use plastic!
It is not a good match for BP if you are case bonding the grain. Kraft is an much better match for BP, it is rough and bonds fairly well to the grain. It also poses no shrapnel hazard if the motor catos.
Those PVC motors you see all the high power rocketry guys using are fairly well designed and have an internal paper liner/inhibitor into which the grain is cast. They still suffer the odd grain/liner delamination and cato explosively scattering bits of jagged PVC and burning propellant everywhere.
Start with 2 oz rocket tubes 3/8" x 3 1/2" (9.5mm x 89 mm), cat litter nozzle and bulkhead plug and greenmix BP as the propellant. A 3-4 mm nozzle hole bored about 50 mm deep into the grain should work, but is by no means optimal. You can use any size you like, but 8-10 x ID long is a good starting point unless you are using a more energetic propellant and ~10 mm ID is physically quite a good size to work with, wasting less propellant and making smaller catos while you are getting the details worked out.
Another, probably more sensible, option would be to start with 'bottle rocket' size devices. They are much more forgiving of packing density and geometry. You can virtually funnel and wire load them, then stab a metal skewer up their bottom to form the nozzle and core. A 5-6 mm ID (around the 1/4" or less), about 45-50 mm long works well. The tubes can be rolled from typing paper, but newsprint will work and it often used in commercial '1 gross in a box' ones. Unfortunately larger devices are easier to make physically with poor tooling.
When I was in highschool I made rockets using nothing but a piece of cardboard from a matchbox, wrapped around an 8 mm Aluminium rod and taped in place. This completely dry-rolled tube was then rammed with a small piece of Aluminium foil to make a primitive nozzle-end plug, BP prepared by mortar and pestle was then rammed in with hand-strength, some paper wadding and hot-melt sealed the top. Then I forced a 2.4 mm philllips screwdriver through the Aluminium foil ball and almost all the way to the top of the grain. The motor was taped to a kebab stick about 6 times longer than iitself, and a fuse of BP meal twisted up in kitchen paper was added. They worked quite well for their 'field expedient' construction, on my website under "Small Experimental Rocket Motors" you can see my recreation of them last year when I was just getting back into pyro. (This doesn't mean you should try to replicate this design! It is only to say primitive designs made with virtually no tooling or materials can work quite well.)