FITS 2009

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The 2009 "Fire in the Sky" (FITS) launch was held Memorial Day weekend May 22-25 near the small town of Mansfield Washington.  It was hosted by the Washington Aerospace Club (WAC).  Friday was a research launch day while Saturday, Sunday and Monday were commercial motor launch days. The weather was excellent during all four days and the launch was very well attended with flyers coming from all over the pacific northwest.   There were a total of 481 flights at FITS with 171 of them on H-N high power motors.

This was definitely another great FITS launch.  It was well organized, safely run, had many awesome flights and lots of great people to meet.  A special thanks goes out to the launch directors for their tireless efforts to make this launch such a huge success. Kent Newman was LD for the research launch and Mike Wyvel and Denny Smith were co-launch directors for the commercial motor days. Also a big thank you to all the Washington Aerospace club members that volunteered and helped run the event.  It really was exceptional! 

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

Panorama view of the FITS launch site

Click on this image to see a slightly larger version of it. Click on the link below for the ultra high res version.

Photo by Vern Knowles

This view is looking east from the top of a small hill next to the FITS camping area.  It was taken on Saturday morning. The launch pads are just out of sight inside the oval dirt race track seen on the left hand edge of this photo.  Click on the photo for a better view. 

Click here to see a large ultra high resolution version of this image.   (7.1 MB)

Most web browsers will automatically scale these panorama images to fit the width of your computer window.  If yours does that, then be sure to expand the image to full size.  You should be able to pan across the high resolution image and get a good look at the whole area. Just as if you are standing there on that small hill.

Aerial view of the FITS launch site

Photo by Vern Knowles

This is an aerial view of the FITS launch site as seen from a camera onboard Wildfire on Sunday afternoon. More aerial photos as well as an HD video from onboard this flight are presented further down on this page.

My Flights at FITS

I flew three rockets at FITS. Angelfire, Wildfire and Coldfire.   Photos, videos and even some audio recordings from these flights are presented below. 

Angelfire and Wildfire launched on Aerotech M1297 motors. Coldfire flew on an Aerotech J415. I selected these smaller M1297 motors for Angelfire and Wildfire in order keep them below 8,000 feet so that they could be launched from the main launch site.  This avoids having to setup and launch from the away cell.  I find that launching from the main site is definitely more fun and a lot more convenient.  All three flights went very well and all three were safely recovered with no damage. Angelfire reached 6,562 feet, Wildfire reached 6,255 feet and Coldfire 3,740 feet.

All three of these rockets also had my new "Kate" system onboard.  Kate is a computer synthesized female voice from an automated flight data reporting system. Kate announces GPS downlink information in real time during the flight. I connected the audio output from Kate into the main PA system so that everyone could listen to it.  It was a big hit!  I received a lot of compliments and enthusiastic responses after the flights.  Kate adds a whole new dimension that I think makes launches even more enjoyable to watch.  It was fun seeing the flight in progress while being told exactly how high, how fast, or how far away the rocket is at any given moment.  You will be able to listen to the audio recording of Kate's announcements made during these flights.  The recordings are presented further down on this page.

Kate worked perfectly on the Angelfire and Coldfire flights.  However, due to an error on my part, Wildfire was launched before the GPS system had acquired enough satellites to get good flight data.  Consequently, Kate was more than a little confused during that flight.  I will be modifying Kate's software so that it will warn me and prevent that from happening again.  Kate is still a fairly new system.  I built it in the summer of 2008 and it has only flown a few times so far.  Each flight provides new ideas for changes and improvements.

All the details for each of my flights are presented below, starting with Angelfire.

Angelfire

 

Angelfire on the pad at FITS 2009.  Click image to see a larger version of it.

Angelfire is 11 feet long, 5.15 inches in diameter and weighed 46 pounds with the motor installed.  It carried the usual assortment of electronics gear on this flight.  The drogue and main parachutes were deployed by a Missile Works RRC2 altimeter and an ARTS recording altimeter. The ARTS altimeter records the entire flight profile using both a barometric sensor and an accelerometer.  In the nosecone, a high speed Garmin GPS unit was transmitting GPS fixes to the ground at the rate of five readings per second using a MaxStream 9XTend 1W spread spectrum frequency hopping 902-928 MHz radio link.   The GPS data was received on the ground and processed in a laptop computer running custom software that generated a synthesized female voice (named Kate) to narrate the flight.  Kate announced altitude, speed, direction, distance and other parameters in real time during the flight.

Angelfire was launched on Saturday afternoon using an Aerotech M1297 motor. The GPS system reported a max altitude of 6,267 feet and a maximum velocity of 434 miles per hour.  The onboard altimeters reported an average of 6,562 feet as the max altitude. (4.7% higher than the GPS altitude.) 

The boost went fine and Angelfire climbed into the sky on a nice vertical trajectory.  The drogue deployment at apogee looked to be just about right.  Main parachute deployment also occurred with 2,000 feet to go, just as planned.  Angelfire ended up landing only 372 feet from the launch pad!  This was the 19th flight of Angelfire.

Kate's Angelfire flight report

Kate is a computer synthesized female voice that narrates the flight in real time by making call outs of altitude, speed, direction, distance, descent rate and so on.  The data for these call outs is supplied by a GPS unit onboard Angelfire.  The information it transmits to the ground is processed in a laptop computer.  Once the software program on the laptop is started it automatically detects liftoff and then makes as many announcements as it can on the way up and on the way down.  It is triggered by key events such as passing through an even thousand foot altitude, reaching max speed, reaching max altitude, and so on.  Kate first does a short introduction, a prelaunch announcement and then waits for liftoff.  After the flight she also does a summary report.  A recording of the actual audio delivered at FITS is available at the link below. However, the recording has been edited to shorten the silent gaps between announcements.  This makes it easier to listen to when you can't actually see the rocket.

Click here to play the audio recording of Kate's Angelfire flight report. Play audio recording of Kate's Angelfire flight report.   

Click on any photo on this page to see a larger version of it.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

Bryan Whitemarsh helped me carry Angelfire out to the launch pad and get it setup and ready for launch.  Thanks Bryan!

The photo on the left shows me setting up my remote controlled cameras on tripods.  The liftoff photos shown below were captured with these cameras.

A nice high resolution version of the liftoff photo shown below is available here.

Photo by Bryan Whitemarsh

Photo by Vern Knowles

Photo by William Carpenter

Angelfire climbs into the sky on an M1297.

Photos by Vern Knowles

Click on the animated photo sequence above to see it in a larger size.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

Angelfire on chute just before touch down.

Photo by Vern Knowles

Photo by Vern Knowles

Photo by Vern Knowles

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

Vern returning after recovering Angelfire.

Pad Cam Video

Click here to view the Windows Media Player version of the video.

Video by Vern Knowles

This is a 12 second video that was captured by a camcorder placed on a tripod up close to the launch pad.

 

 

View Windows Media Player version 

 (1.7 MB)

 

View QuickTime version

(1.6 MB)

Angelfire Flight Trajectory

 

 6,267 feet max altitude

434 mph max velocity

 

Boost phase

Coast phase

Drogue parachute

Main parachute

 

The town of Mansfield is in the lower left corner of this image.  The red dot is one mile from the launch pad.

The image above shows the Angelfire flight trajectory when looking northeast from behind the flight line.  It was created by entering the Angelfire GPS flight data into Google Earth.  The red segment shows the duration of the motor burn.  The blue segment is the coast to apogee.  The yellow segment is the descent phase on drogue chute and the green segment is the descent on the main parachute.  The white vertical scale shows intervals of 1000 feet above the ground. Click on the image to get a better view.

 Click here to see the Angelfire flight in Google Earth

If you already have Google Earth installed on your computer then you should be able to view the flight trajectory by clicking on the link above.  You can then use the pan, tilt and zoom controls in Google Earth to see it from any angle.  If that doesn't work then try right clicking on the link above, save the file to a convenient place and then open the file from inside the Google Earth program.   Google Earth is a FREE program available here.

Wildfire

 
Wildfire on the pad at FITS 2009.  Click in the image to get a better view.

Wildfire was launched on Sunday afternoon. This was its 28th flight!  Wildfire is 9 feet long and 5.5 inches in diameter.  It carried a Canon TX1 HD video camcorder.  It also carried a GPS system in the nose cone that transmitted real time data to the ground so that Kate could narrate the entire flight.

View Wildfire Camera/GPS payload design

This flight was on a "Baby M", the Aerotech M1297 white lightning motor.  The climb to apogee was completely nominal with Wildfire reaching 6,255 feet.  At apogee it deployed two parachutes.  One for the rocket itself and a separate one for the camera/GPS payload module.

This was a very successful flight from the standpoint that Wildfire was safely recovered without any damage.  The onboard video also turned out very nice.  However, due to an error on my part, Wildfire was launched before the GPS system had acquired enough satellites to get good flight data. Consequently, Kate was very confused during the flight and the information being reported was definitely not correct. I will be modifying Kate's software so that it will warn me and prevent this from happening again.

Onboard HD Flight Video

Click here to view the Windows Media Player version

Video by Vern Knowles

This is onboard video captured by an HD camcorder.  If you have a high-speed broadband connection then the 720p HD version is a must see!  I recommend you download the entire file first. Then play it.

View 720p High Def version    

(69 MB)

View QuickTime version         

 (13 MB)

View Windows Media Player version

(14 MB)

Pad Cam Video

Click here to view the Winows Media Player version of the video

Video by Vern Knowles

This is a 15 second video that was captured by a camcorder placed on a tripod up close to the launch pad.

 

View QuickTime version

(1.8 MB)

View Windows Media Player version 

 (1.9 MB)

Photo by Rick Clapp

In the photo to the left I am enabling the onboard video camera just before launch.  There are three small holes in the airframe that allow a tool to be inserted to turn-on the camcorder, set the zoom and start it recording.  A video connector also allows a small handheld  LCD monitor to be used to display the camcorder image.  This makes it easy to verify the camcorder is setup correctly and has the proper zoom setting.  Once the camcorder is good to go, the video cable is disconnected and Wildfire is ready for launch.  The metal hood just below the nosecone is a mirror mount that allows the camcorder to look down the side of Wildfire during launch.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo

The camcorder will only capture 15 minutes of HD video. I quickly run back to the launch table after starting the camera so that Wildfire can be immediately launched.

On this particular flight, I forgot to turn-on the GPS until after I had already enabled the camcorder and run back to the launch table.  Therefore, to preserve as much video record time as possible, I had to run back out to the launch pad, enable the GPS and then run back to the launch table. Unfortunately, the GPS did not have sufficient time to lock onto enough satellites to get a good position fix before launch.  The resulting GPS flight data was pretty much worthless. I plan to prevent that next time by having Kate automatically double check the GPS status for me.

Photo by Rick Clapp

Photo by Rick Clapp

Click on the animated photo sequence at the left to see it in a larger size.

Photo by Vern Knowles

Photo by Rick Clapp

Photos by Vern Knowles

The photos below are single frame images taken from the camcorder onboard Wildfire. Click on any image to get a better look at it.  Wildfire peaked out at 6,255 feet.

Photo by Vern Knowles

The photo above shows the Wildfire airframe on parachute (from above) as it descends back to the ground.  The camcorder comes down on its own parachute and it drops much more slowly than the air frame.

 

 

Wildfire landed in a field not far from the farm buildings.

Photo by Vern Knowles

Coldfire

Click on the drawing above to view the Coldfire design details.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

Coldfire was specifically designed to fly on HyperTEK hybrid motors.  However, I elected not to do so at FITS. I didn't want to bother with all the Nitrous and ground support equipment needed for such a flight.  It was much easier to just fly it on a solid motor.   Coldfire was launched on an Aerotech J415 late Friday afternoon at FITS.  The onboard GPS reported a peak altitude of 3,515 feet. The onboard altimeters reported 3,740 feet, which is 6.4% higher.  Coldfire touched down 1,596 feet from the pad.  This was the seventh flight of Coldfire.  It was safely recovered with no damage.

Click here to play the audio recording of Kate's Coldfire flight report. Play audio recording of Kate's Coldfire flight report.   

This is a recording of the audio report that Kate delivered at FITS during the flight of Coldfire.  This is a non real time playback in that some of the silent gaps between announcements have been reduced or eliminated.

Link to Coldfire construction photos.

Link to other Coldfire launch photos.

Coldfire Flight Trajectory

 

3,515 feet max altitude

300 mph max velocity

 

Boost phase

Coast phase

Main parachute

The image above shows the Coldfire flight trajectory when looking due north from behind the flight line.  It was created by entering the Coldfire GPS flight data into Google Earth.  The red segment shows the duration of the motor burn.  The blue segment is the coast to apogee.  The green segment is the descent on parachute.  The white vertical scale shows intervals of 1000 feet above the ground. Click on the image to get a better view.

 Click here to see the Coldfire flight in Google Earth

If you already have Google Earth installed on your computer then you should be able to view the flight trajectory by clicking on the link above.  You can then use the pan, tilt and zoom controls in Google Earth to see it from any angle.  If that doesn't work then try right clicking on the link above, save the file to a convenient place and then open the file from inside the Google Earth program.   Google Earth is a FREE program available here.

Just for fun, the two trajectories for Coldfire and Angelfire can be viewed on the same image.

Each starts in a different location from a different launch pad.

Coldfire does not use a dual deployment system like Angelfire so it does not have the yellow drogue chute segment.

Click on the photo for a closer look. 

Other photos from FITS

Photo by Vern Knowles

Perfect weather for flying rockets!

Photo by Vern Knowles

Fliers waiting in line to be assigned a launch pad.

Photo by Vern Knowles

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

Mansfield and the FITS launch area as seen from the away cell.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

The bleacher seats at FITS.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

A very large dust devil wandered through the camp area on Sunday afternoon.  It did some serious damage to some of the easy-up canopies that were in its path.   Other than that, the weather Sunday was great for flying rockets all day long.

Photo by Tsolo T. Tsolo from RocketShots! © 2009

This group photo was taken with the Mansfield water tower in the background.  I could not resist modifying it slightly.

Want more FITS?     My FITS 2007 launch report can be found here.

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