How safe is it to ram a bp rocket.
#1
Posted 16 April 2004 - 08:24 PM
Just wondering after having seen something on chaz's site saying someone maneged to blow some fingers off while ramming a bp rocket.
If it is dangerous are there any precations i should be taking to save my fingers
#2
Posted 16 April 2004 - 09:39 PM
Always use non-ferrous (e.g. brass or aluminium) tooling.
Always ram in a location away from other persons, mixed compositions, or flammable articles. When pressing a composition always use a blast screen.
#3
Posted 17 April 2004 - 12:39 AM
If your not comfortable with your procedures don't do it.
On the other hand this along with pressing is how rockets are made and have been made for a while. There are lots of precautions to be taken and I would say you should find out more before proceeding.
I remember reading about a case of accidental ignition. I don't remember if it was a hypothetical scenario or if it was real, but it made sense. It said that in the case of accidental ignition, the rammer would (or did) shoot out of the rocket casing under the pressure of the initial ignition, then would then just burn as a tube of pressed powder would. The pressed powder doesn't have enough surface area to burn quick enough to build the amount of pressure it would take to 'explode'.
Take this how you want, I don't think there's any study on the subject but it sounds
believable. I don't know if this makes anyone feel 'safer' but I guess you could add "don't hang your head over the tube of black powder you are hitting with a hammer"
as a precautionary measure.
#4
Posted 05 June 2004 - 06:54 PM
I'm just putting a Skylighter order together but may leave off the Titanium if I'm likely to get problems from ramming.
I read somewhere (Dan Williams site I think) to use spherical Titanium for a rocket tail but that product seems to have been removed from Skylighters site. Dose anyone know what other Titanium from there site would be best?
Thanks
#5
Posted 06 June 2004 - 09:07 AM
No, it is not an acceptable practice to ram ANY composition containing titanium - even if it is in sponge format.Is it an acceptable practice to RAM a BP rocket with added Titanium?
I'm just putting a Skylighter order together but may leave off the Titanium if I'm likely to get problems from ramming.
I read somewhere (Dan Williams site I think) to use spherical Titanium for a rocket tail but that product seems to have been removed from Skylighters site. Dose anyone know what other Titanium from there site would be best?
Thanks
Use a press - keep your titanium content under 8%.
#6
Posted 06 June 2004 - 09:10 AM
However I personally take the risk with spherical Titanium all the time. I'd never risk it with flake or sponge, and never drill into it. Flake makes a very dense tail, but the sparks are shorter lived than with spherical in my experence.
http://www.vk2zay.net/
#7
Posted 06 June 2004 - 02:50 PM
Big G had recommended me to press it to 8800 psi, but because of my hand made tube I manage to press it only 3000 psi. With this pressure I had never had any failure so far out of the 56 rockets that was produce. Last week I attached a 2 inches shell (47 grams). 10 of the rockets were successful.
Thanks a lot to BigG for the advices.
#8
Posted 06 June 2004 - 09:08 PM
...I pressed my rockets at about 500 psi on my hydraulic press .500 psi on my press equals about 6000 lbs force on the rammer ..
.....to work out the force on the rammer you must know the diameter of the ram on your press ...my ram was 6.5 cm..in diameter..So pye R squared= surface area
3.142 x(radius2)32.5mmX32.5mm=33.18 cm Surface area(of my ram)
...... Now you need to know the diameter of ram on your rocket or whatever your pressing im using 3/4 ram (19mm) So...
3.142 x(radius2)9.5 X 9.5mm=2.83 cm Surface area(on rocket ram)
So if you want 8000 lbs force on your ram?
You need to do the math
.... 2.83cm X 8000lbs = 22640 lbs divide this by surface area of your ram 22640 divide by 33.18cm(ram surface area)=682 psi on the gauge ..
.
So as you can see even though i had` only 682psi on the gauge the actual force on the ram was 8000 lbs!.
....So Kembang api if you pressed at 3000lbs do you know what your rams surface area is? i Guess pressing with a 4 or a 5 ton press you would need about 3000 psi on your gauge what tonnage is your press?...
#9
Posted 06 June 2004 - 10:08 PM
Second, the discussion was specific to Whistle Mix rockets. You do not need such high pressure on BP. The pressure on Whistle is to avoid explosion of the rocket.
Third, I'm not great in rockets , and I'm sure I said somewhere that it's not my cup of tea. Shoot about seven recently - they all lifted with no blow through, but three of them hit the ground before the header ignited. Practice makes perfect - and only lots of tries get you to have perfect flight every time. Even the biggest experts ? with well documented procedures and endless retries - get it wrong from time to time - Especially when trying new type of device or having to switch source of materials.
#10
Posted 07 June 2004 - 12:52 AM
Sasman: Thank you for the calculation. My rocket's size is 20 mm inner diameter and my old hydraulic press come with an analog gauge in MPa. What should be my reading at the final press? Thank you for the help.
#11
Posted 04 December 2004 - 09:06 PM
Is there no risk of BP igniting in a press?
Im worried that if i pressed with a jack at the bottom, a stainless steel tube with the BP in in the middle, and a 12 ton "roof" to stop the jack pushing the powder out the top, then it would surely explode (ie. as diesel in a diesel engine does) and because the "weakest" confinement i mention above is a stainless steel tube, it would be catastrophic? Sorry if its obvious, I just cant get my head round how i can make BP pressing safe?
#12
Posted 04 December 2004 - 09:52 PM
#13
Posted 05 December 2004 - 10:05 AM
#14
Posted 05 December 2004 - 10:21 AM
#15
Posted 05 December 2004 - 04:34 PM
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