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Amateur rocket launch reaches 121,000 feet

ddeville.com

165 points by zackbelow 15 years ago · 57 comments

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alphadog 15 years ago

121,000 feet = 36.88 km

From Wikipedia: The Kármán line lies at an altitude of 100 kilometres (62 mi) above the Earth's sea level, and is commonly used to define the boundary between the Earth's atmosphere and outer space.

That's not space. Though it's an amazing feat nonetheless.

  • iwwr 15 years ago

    It's not an artificial boundary. It's the approximate maximum altitude at which winged vehicles have to move faster than the orbital velocity (at that altitude) in order to attain lift (where lift is depending on the pressure at that altitude). A wing moving below orbital velocity and above that altitude will not get lift at any angle of attack, just drag.

  • JabavuAdams 15 years ago

    It all depends whether you're using that metric, though -- it's all fairly arbitrary. X15 pilots were considered astronauts for exceeding 100k ft.

  • user24 15 years ago

    *feat.

    But I'd say that 121,000 is pretty amazing feet too...

  • artursapek 15 years ago

    I was waiting for the camera to stop picking up sound the whole time. It got really squeaky and full of static towards the peak but it never seemed to happen.

willyt 15 years ago

If you look at the cut open V2 rocket in the Imperial War museum in London you can see about 1/3 of the innards is the control system; gyro's, inertial guidance etc. Today you can buy that on a chips from digi-key, farnell, sparkfun or wherever for say $50 or even just root your smartphone and use it as the control system. It always surprises me that there is very little precision rocketry or ROV proliferation amongst the countries and political/religious movements with extreme agendas out there.

mekoka 15 years ago

Sending your own widget up and having it bring back snapshots of other continents and a round Earth, only seconds later. What an amazing feeling it must be. Makes me wanna go dig up my old mechanics book. Can someone give a ballpark figure of how much it would cost to build something like this and how long it took them?

  • jgrahamc 15 years ago

    You could cheaply reach the same altitude using a helium balloon. 121,000 ft is only 37km. Plenty of home grown helium balloons have reached that height (and higher).

    My project reached 32km: http://blog.jgc.org/2011/04/gaga-1-flight.html

  • mjbellantoni 15 years ago

    What a feeling indeed. The photo with the black sky and the Earth's curvature made me, inexplicably, pump my fist in the air and say "Yeah!"

    This is pretty awesome.

jcapote 15 years ago

"As the GPS devices on Qu8k failed to log readings above 100,000 feet, the attempt is likely disqualified."

would love to know what happened

  • jgrahamc 15 years ago

    Well, it could easily be that they hit the CoCom limit on the GPS units they were using: http://blog.jgc.org/2010/11/gaga-1-cocom-limit-for-gps.html

    Perhaps the GPS devices were disabled by speed, or altitude, and didn't have time to reset while at apogee to get the reading.

    • JabavuAdams 15 years ago

      Yes, this. There's an ongoing discussion on arocket regarding these issues. It's a problem for many amateur teams.

    • nknight 15 years ago

      I'm surprised they didn't specifically seek out a receiver that implemented the rule correctly. Since it's an "and", not an "or", a proper receiver should have kicked back in by the time it reached apogee.

  • necro 15 years ago

    I worked at one of the major GPS manufacturers as a hardware/firmware designer and we stopped tracking above a certain altitude and over a certain velocity due to government policy. I remember one time there was a bug report from a customer complaining that our GPS would not work after mach 2 or some extreme speed. This ended up being a "qualified" foreign government client, so a new firmware version was sent which removed the restriction.

  • jmaygarden 15 years ago

    I thought commercial GPS was disabled above 60,000 ft.

    • qntm 15 years ago

      It says here[1] "All GPS receivers capable of functioning above 18 kilometres (11 mi) altitude and 515 metres per second (1,001 kn)[56] are classified as munitions (weapons) for which U.S. State Department export licenses are required. These limits attempt to prevent use of a receiver in a ballistic missile." News to me!

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Positioning_System#Restr...

      • pavel_lishin 15 years ago

        People have built their own, though. It's not easy, but it can be done.

        The question is, does launching a rocket into space technically count as export?

      • coob 15 years ago

        Does that law apply GLONASS as well?

  • tibbon 15 years ago

    Went higher than the GPS satellites could see?

    • Symmetry 15 years ago

      No, but there are limits on how high commercial GPS receivers will work to prevent them from being used to guide ballistic missiles.

    • dalore 15 years ago

      But the rules is that the gps devices needs to record a measurement greater than 100k feet. If that's higher than what GPS satellites can see then no one can win.

    • derobert 15 years ago

      Two things:

      First, GPS satellites are in orbit ~20,000 km altitude, so this rocket is nowhere near too high. The beamwidth is pretty wide (it covers the entire half of the Earth, after all). Some quick research shows that below 3–4000km, there isn't much difference. http://emergentspace.com/gps_pubs/SSVP-v1.07-2column.pdf.

      You should be able to get exact orbits (to the centimeter!) from the NGS (http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/orbits/), if you're interested.

      Second, its the receiver that sees the GPS satellites, not the other way around. The satellites transmit, the receiver does not.

    • JabavuAdams 15 years ago

      GPS satellites are much higher than that.

mhb 15 years ago

Can't they confirm that the altitude met the contest minimum based on how much earth curvature there is in the photos?

  • jgrahamc 15 years ago

    They would have to compensate for artificial curvature introduced by the cameras they are using. If you look at the images you can clearly see that effect.

    • mhb 15 years ago

      They should be able to do that. No?

      • thwest 15 years ago

        Yes camera calibration is a well known problem. You have some nice straight lines from the launch pad structure you should be able to do it with.

iamdave 15 years ago

I don't have anywhere near the smarts to pull something like this off (maybe one day, one day), but I'm always so excited when people try these and they work.

Awesome job

achristoffersen 15 years ago

Related; Copenhagen Suborbitals - homegrown opensource _manned_ rocket: http://www.copenhagensuborbitals.com/ - Peter Madsen (one of the two guys building this thing) also built a submarine..

Edit: June launch attempt http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=K... http://www.copenhagensuborbitals.com/contentgfx/Rocket-2011_... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen_suborbitals

artursapek 15 years ago

I'm impressed with the machining on this. It looks like he made it at home in his own shop. It looks very solidly welded and bolted together. As an ID student that's the most amazing part for me, the thing had to have been really solid to not just fall apart under that much speed. Edit: Although I was disappointed by the lettering coming off the side of the shaft and covering the camera lens. Something that would be hard to predict :P

imd 15 years ago

If GPS failed before 100,000 ft (and it looks like any commercial GPS would), what about the altitude charts on the project's homepage?[0] How were they generated? Can that data-gathering method qualify it for the Carmack challenge?

0: http://ddeville.com/derek/Qu8k.html

  • jholman 15 years ago

    As to how they were generated, the charts are labelled. The first shows raw acceleration data, plus the first and second integrals of that data. The second shows data from a _simulation_, which was tweaked after the flight to approximate more closely data that they do have.

ashishbharthi 15 years ago

I am not sure if anybody would know here but do we need to take permission from FAA for doing this kind of stuff?

joshmlewis 15 years ago

Watch the video! It's one of the coolest things I've seen in awhile.

shuaib 15 years ago

One of the most awesomest things I've seen in a while.

TylerE 15 years ago

Pretty impressive, but that ain't space.

resnamen 15 years ago

I read that as "dude sends epic homegrown into space." I pictured an enormous plant in a hydroponics research facility, with growth unfettered by gravity...

tibbon 15 years ago

Looks like they were at the Black Rock Playa. Hope they take all their moop with them, since the Burning Man people just got done cleaning it up...

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