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-   -   University of Alabama: Huntsville Student Launch 2014 First Full Scale Flight (https://www.miataturbo.net/insert-bs-here-4/university-alabama-huntsville-student-launch-2014-first-full-scale-flight-78735/)

vehicular 04-26-2014 03:55 PM

University of Alabama: Huntsville Student Launch 2014 First Full Scale Flight
 
10 Attachment(s)
I went back to school a couple years ago, and I'm finally about to finish my degree. I have one class in the summer. One of the last classes engineers take at UAH is Senior Design. It's two semesters long, and the difficulty of Senior Design classes varies. Ours spiraled completely out of control.

The class I signed up for was Rocket Design (I'm a Mechanical; the class was split about 50/50 with Aeros). Rocket Design usually flies a NASA competition every year (Student Launch Initiative), but since NASA's budget was a mess, it didn't look like there was going to be an event this year, so we sought out another project to design an aerodynamic test bed for Nanolaunch, another NASA project. We were going to build a rocket with the same outer profile as the full scale Nanolaunch rocket, and take test data off of it to find a bunch of aerodynamic data for them. We designed a rocket almost completely before the end of the Fall semester when, 2 weeks before school let out, NASA announced that they had found money, and there would be a competition after all. Not only that, but they found money by passing the costs for the competition on to corporate sponsors who got to make all sorts of demands about how the rockets would be built.

What this meant to us was that we had gone from a big, but gentle motor and ~15Gs of acceleration, one payload, and unlimited flight ceiling, to a monster motor, 44Gs, 4 payloads, and completely redesigning our rocket in ~2/3 the time we would have had to design and build everything on a normal year.

Today we flew it.



https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1398542129



https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1398542129



https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1398542129

^^^^Enginerd for scale.





It's 10 feet long and 4.5" in diameter. We flew it today on the small motor (~330lbs thrust; the big motor makes 1366lbs thrust). After lots of teething issues with our parachute deployment system we've had two successful flights in a row now (one on a prototype rocket, and one in the full scale). We've flown two subscale/ prototype rockets nearly a dozen times total now. We've redesigned the full scale rocket 15 times or more due to supplier problems and NASA shenanigans. We've written 4 150-250 page reports. Half the team sucked, and the other half of the team had to take up their slack. As Hardware Team Lead, I've put in hundreds of hours on this project. Three weeks ago I gave up on finishing a rocket at all due to serious supplier problems, much less finishing it in time to make it to competition.

I'm pretty happy that we've made it this far.




05pearl 04-26-2014 06:54 PM

cool. wanted to see video but it's listed as private...

hornetball 04-26-2014 07:49 PM

Same here.

Amongst other things, I'm a BSAE (USNA) and MSAE (U of MD). Also a PE (Mechanical and Control Systems). Throw us old engineers a bone here!

How's the job market looking? Aren't you glad our only ticket to the space station these days is through Russia?

05pearl 04-26-2014 08:24 PM

BSAE here

vehicular 04-26-2014 09:19 PM

I fixed the video. That was the first video I've ever uploaded with the youtube android app.

The job market socks hard. At least in Huntsville it does. With all the DOD budget problems, finding a job in engineering out here is a feat.

hornetball 04-26-2014 11:24 PM

Cool vid. Works well now.

I remember pounding doors in Huntsville for a starting engineering position back in late 1991. Same story then. Cyclical.

05pearl 04-27-2014 09:21 AM

Sweet. We never had the opportunity to do that in school.

vehicular 04-27-2014 02:14 PM


Originally Posted by hornetball (Post 1125773)
Cool vid. Works well now.

I remember pounding doors in Huntsville for a starting engineering position back in late 1991. Same story then. Cyclical.

My boss graduated from UAH with a BSEE in 91 or 92, and was in the same boat. she's been less than encouraging. Luckily I have a job for now, but it won't last forever, and I'd shoot myself if it did... Hopefully the fact that I'm not a 22 year old fresh-out will help me stand out from the crowd.

hornetball 04-27-2014 04:52 PM

Well, plenty of work in the DFW area. And it's not linked to the defense/federal budget. What kind of work are you looking for?

You can take it to PMs if you like. I've got a lot of contacts in civil aerospace/avionics.

shooterschmidty 04-27-2014 05:37 PM

That's what I was thinking. I've been looking around a little for civilian engineer jobs and most of my friends said that the job market is good for the most part. Unless you're tied to Huntsville for some reason there's no reason to stay there.

kenzo42 04-28-2014 01:59 AM

Did the rocket fly into the sun?


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