[The Rocketry Show] #5.72: Ken Patterson on Realistic Looking Modeling and Air Brushes! (Pt. One)

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-72.mp3

Ken Patterson, a friend of CG joins us in studio to talk about airbrushes, primarily, but the discussion quickly blooms into topics we can all use…especially those of us looking to make our rockets look realistic. These topics apply especially to scale model rocketeers.

Ken is an award winning modeler of military aircraft of all kinds, and shares techniques that he has honed and perfected continuously since his childhood, and he helps The Rocket n00b cross the hump into air brushing his models for the first time!

Visit https://www.therocketryshow.com for more details and pictures!

 

[The Rocketry Show] Episode #71: Steve Thatcher of SMTDesigns.Com

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-71f.mp3

We are joined by Steve Thatcher of SMT Designs.  Steve offers a great group of time saving products for rocketeers, and his electronics sleds, which offers quite a bit of configuration flexibility!

Enjoy!

Some background on Steve Thatcher:

 SMT Designs is a small company that I started to offer rocketry, electronics, photography, and software products. The name is simply my initials and what I do best.  I have many years of experience in a variety of fields.  I am an electronics engineer that can design hardware and write software for embedded platforms.  From concept, to prototype creation, to machining parts for whatever is being designed.

I am also a photographer and have reached a point where I am sharing my view of the world through pictures.  This transition into products was sparked by the passing of a dear friend Pat Stinnett in 2015.  She saw the world and shared her heart through the photos that she produced.  I will try and do the same in her memory. 

[The Rocketry Show] # 70: Season 5 debut!

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-70.mp3

 

Welcome to season 5 of the rocketry show!

Joe Barnard’s Halloween Costume…

 

 

Joe’s costume is based on the notorious Elon Musk smoking marijuana during a podcast incident…

 

The crew of the rocketry show gather to talk a little about what is going on, and catch up on their rocketry projects.

Also:

A Doughnut shaped Earth?

Daniel visits the Little Dipper Cafe in the Jamaica Plane neighborhood in Boston.

The Little Dipper JP: Great food and model rockets!

CG gives a quick report on his visit to Alabama for Bama Blastoff.

And he also gets his first peak at a Mach1 kit in action.  Casey Anderson of MTMA rocket club flew one of the BT20 fiberglass kits!

Casey Anderson and his Mach1 rocket kit.

Mach1 Unchained Lightning rocket on liftoff…

[The Rocketry Show] Episode #33 (Recast): Astronaut, Colonel Rick Searfoss

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-033_rpl.mp3

We are happy to re-cast a wonderful conversation we had with former NASA Astronaut, Col. Rick Searfoss back in 2016.  He joined us to talk about rockets, The Space Shuttle, and being an astronaut!

Col. Rick Searfoss[/caption]

From his NASA Bio:

PERSONAL DATA: Born June 5, 1956, in Mount Clemens, Michigan, but considers Portsmouth, New Hampshire, to be his hometown. Married; three children. He enjoys running, soccer, radio-controlled model aircraft, Scouting, backpacking, and classical music.

EDUCATION: Graduated from Portsmouth Senior High School, Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 1974; received a bachelor of science degree in aeronautical engineering from the USAF Academy in 1978, and a master of science degree in aeronautics from the California Institute of Technology on a National Science Foundation Fellowship in 1979. USAF Squadron Officer School, Air Command and Staff College, and Air War College.

ORGANIZATIONS: Association of Space Explorers, National Eagle Scout Association, Air Force Association, Academy of Model Aeronautics.

SPECIAL HONORS: Awarded the Harmon, Fairchild, Price and Tober Awards (top overall, academic, engineering, and aeronautical engineering graduate), United States Air Force Academy Class of 1978. Air Force Aero Propulsion Laboratory Excellence in Turbine Engine Design award. USAF Squadron Officer's School Commandant's Trophy as top graduate. Distinguished graduate, USAF Fighter Weapons School. Named the Tactical Air Command F-111 Instructor Pilot of the Year, 1985. Selected for Outstanding Young Men of America, 1987. Recipient of the Air Force Commendation Medal, Air Force Meritorious Service Medal, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Defense Superior Service Medal, NASA Spaceflight Medal (3), NASA Exceptional Service Medal, NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, and Air Force Distinguished Flying Cross.

EXPERIENCE: Searfoss graduated in 1980 from Undergraduate Pilot Training at Williams Air Force Base, Arizona. From 1981-1984, he flew the F-111F operationally at RAF Lakenheath, England, followed by a tour at Mountain Home AFB, Idaho, where he was an F-111A instructor pilot and weapons officer until 1987. In 1988 he attended the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School, Patuxent River, Maryland, as a USAF exchange officer. He was a flight instructor at the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards AFB, California, when selected for the astronaut program.

He has logged over 5,000 hours flying time in 56 different types of aircraft and over 939 hours in space. He also holds FAA Airline Transport Pilot, glider, and flight instructor ratings.

NASA EXPERIENCE: Selected by NASA in January 1990, Searfoss became an astronaut in July 1991. Initially assigned to the Astronaut Office Mission Support Branch, Searfoss was part of a team responsible for crew ingress/strap-in prior to launch and crew egress after landing. He was subsequently assigned to flight software verification in the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL). Additionally, he served as the Astronaut Office representative for both flight crew procedures and Shuttle computer software development. He also served as the Astronaut Office Vehicle System and Operations Branch Chief, leading a team of several astronauts and support engineers working on Shuttle and International Space Station systems development, rendezvous and landing/rollout operations, and advanced projects initiatives. A veteran of three space flights, Searfoss has logged over 39 days in space. He served as pilot on STS-58 (October 18 to November 1, 1993) and STS-76 (March 22-31, 1996), and was the mission commander on STS-90 (April 17, to May 3, 1998). Searfoss retired from the Air Force and left NASA in 1998. For the next few years he worked in private industry and, more recently, was a research test pilot at NASAs Dryden Flight Research Center. In February 2003, Searfoss left Dryden to pursue private business interests.

SPACE FLIGHT EXPERIENCE: Searfoss served as STS-58 pilot on the seven-person life science research mission aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia, launching from the Kennedy Space Center on October 18, 1993, and landing at Edwards Air Force Base on November 1, 1993. The crew performed neurovestibular, cardiovascular, cardiopulmonary, metabolic, and musculoskeletal medical experiments on themselves and 48 rats, expanding our knowledge of human and animal physiology both on earth and in space flight. In addition, the crew performed 16 engineering tests aboard the Orbiter Columbia and 20 Extended Duration Orbiter Medical Project experiments. The mission was accomplished in 225 orbits of the Earth.

Launching March 22, 1996, Searfoss flew his second mission as pilot of STS-76 aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis. During this 9-day mission the STS-76 crew performed the third docking of an American spacecraft with the Russian space station Mir. In support of a joint U.S./Russian program, the crew transported to Mir nearly two tons of water, food, supplies, and scientific equipment, as well as U.S. Astronaut Shannon Lucid to begin her six-month stay in space. STS-76 included the first ever spacewalk on a combined Space Shuttle-Space Station complex. The flight crew also conducted scientific investigations, including European Space Agency sponsored biology experiments, the Kidsat earth observations project, and several engineering flight tests. Completed in 145 orbits, STS-76 landed at Edwards Air Force Base, California, on March 31, 1996.

Searfoss commanded a seven person crew on the STS-90 Neurolab mission which launched on April 17, 1998. During the 16-day Spacelab flight the crew served as both experiment subjects and operators for 26 individual life science experiments focusing on the effects of microgravity on the brain and nervous system. STS-90 was the last and most complex of the twenty-five Spacelab missions NASA has flown. Neurolab's scientific results will have broad applicability both in preparing for future long duration human space missions and in clinical applications on Earth. Completed in 256 orbits, STS-90 landed at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, on May 3, 1998.

FEBRUARY 2003

[The Rocketry Show] # 69: Season 4 finale. NARAM 60 / Gheem’s report from the field, and news!

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-69.mp3

We wrap up season 4 with two field reports for you.

We start with our friend Jesse Ulibarri, who got some neat audio from NARAM 60, as well as his "man on the scene" review.  We thank him for that effort!

Gheem recorded his trip to the former "Bob Evans Farm" in southern Ohio, where he witnessed the Level 1 certification of our listener "Captain Kirk" as well as Gheem's former student who went for his Level 2 certification.

Enjoy!

 

[The Rocketry Show] # 68: Workshop Talk & Your Feedback

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-68f.mp3

The rocketry show team regroup after a busy production schedule producing the last few episodes, and we go for a laid back workshop talk episode and look over your comments from the last several weeks.

We also talk about our new e-mail list group you can join to get information on the show from us, chat with us and other listeners, and share rocket war stories.

Look here to subscribe:

https://groups.io/g/therocketryshow

If you are on facebook, like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/therocketryshow

Our facebook discussion forum: https://www.facebook.com/groups/therocketryshow

 

 

[The Rocketry Show] # 67: Low and Mid Power fiberglass rockets and ‘Bama Blastoff.

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-67f.mp3

Posted on August 25, 2018 by CG

We’re joined by Steve Skinner of Mach 1 Rocketry and Ronald Dunn of Birmingham Rocket Boys to talk about Mach 1 and their new line of fiberglass rockets, as well as the Bama Blastoff event happening at the Dee River Ranch in west of Aliceville, Alabama.

The event boasts a 16,800 foot standing waiver and 12,000 acres of mostly open recovery area.

Want to learn more about this and BT tube sized fiberglass rockets? You’ve come to the right episode!

[The Rocketry Show] # 66: NSL 2018 Part Two

The Rocketry Show Podcast https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/therocketryshow/TRS-66f.mp3

Welcome to part two of our NSL 2018 episode!

Gheem will take you on a journey through NSL 2018 using the magic of "soundscaping". We worked hard to try to paint the images and experiences of NSL 2018 through the magic of sound. Theatre of the mind, if you will!

Gheem and his composite B motor from Quest.

Also, Plenty more from Vern and Gleda Estes as well.

Joe Barnard.

Our Assistant Producer Kelly and her rocket. 

Enjoy!