Scratch Mini-Toobah Original Design / Scratch Built

Scratch - Mini-Toobah {Scratch}

Contributed by Dick Stafford

Manufacturer: Scratch
(Contributed - by Dick Stafford - 06/02/08) Hartle Engineering Sold Resin Nosecone

Brief:
Last year, I received samples of the new Hartle Engineering solid resin nose cones from JonRocket. I've been remiss in submitting a review. Thanks, and my apologies John!. Hartle offers three styles of BT-5 cones and one BT-20 cone. You can see all of them on JonRocket's nose cone page. This review will describe the cones and the rocket I built from the longer BT-5 cone, the Mini-Toobah. The name is a homage to Dave Weber's Toober, which has logged over 200 high power flights.

Construction:
The parts list:

  • Hartle NC-5B cone
  • BT-5, 6.25"
  • Estes 1/8" launch lug
  • Spent mini-motor case (could use a real motor block)
  • Thin Kevlar®, ~ 12"
  • Thin elastic, ~ 4"

The Hartle cones are solid cast and their outer surface is perfect. The cone-to-shoulder transition was clean on the longer cone but was rough on the shorter one. The later was easily cleaned up with a sharp hobby knife. The attachment point appears to be a paper clip...works as good as anything. I found them to be a loose fit in the Estes BT-5, which is easily fixed with a little tape.

The cones are, as expected, heavier than the typical hollow plastic or balsa. However, unless you're building a MicroMaxx model, the added weight shouldn't be an issue. I had kicked around building a micro but decided to go for a 13mm design instead. The shorter cone would make a great micro-Fat Boy or Big Bertha but I opted for a downscale of my El Tubo Loco.

This was a trivial build. From BT-5 stock, I cut one 2.5" body section and six 5/8" tube fins. These were glued together in pairs and then to the body tube. I used Aleene's Tacky glue throughout. A 5/8" long lug is mounted in one of the fins. I cut a motor block from a spent casing. This was notched and the Kevlar® was tied around it. There is not much room in the body minus the motor and the cone's shoulder. It was all I could do to pack the shock harness.

To make sure it is stable, I weighed the components and made a RockSim model. The cone alone is 0.24 oz and the entire rocket is 0.34 oz. It is quite stable.

Finishing:
I first scuffed the cone with fine sandpaper and shot a coat of PlastiCoat primer. I anticipated this will be hard to find in the grass, so I went for a bright finish using Rustoleum day-glo orange. I added two vinyl strips to snazz it up a bit.

Flight:
There wasn't much prep as it uses tumble recovery. It flew nicely on an A3-4 and I could even see it recover!

Summary:
The Hartle Engineering cones are nice to work with. In this case, their solid construction and weight helped with stability.

I like the design of this little rocket but, being small, it could easily disappear into rocket eating grass, shrubbery, or trees.

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