Missile Technology on the Cheap.

 by Kiteman

Whoosh! The gleaming projectile hurtles towards the stars, trailing vapour and open mouths.

Well, sort of.

Rockets are popular. Big, powerful and, above all, expensive. Shuttle launches cost billions of dollars a shot, and unmanned launches aren't much cheaper. You can, of course, do it yourself. Burt Rutan has his own company that builds rockets as well as aircraft, and the British Starchaser team are working on their own system for launching tourists and satellites.

Unfortunately, 'real' rocketry is far beyond the scope most pockets, and even modest-sized liquid and solid-fuelled rockets are too expensive for the casual hobbyist. They are more in the realm of the dedicated enthusiast. Toyshops sell kits by companies like Estes, and high-power models are also available online, but they are still a bit of a stretch for the casual pocket, costing up to several tens of pounds per launch. This instructable describes three ways of getting into rocketry on a pocket-money budget.

 
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Step 1: Take a Step Back...

... and think what a rocket actually is. Newton's Third Law of Motion states that, for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. That's how a rocket works; push something out the back, the rest of the rocket gets pushed forwards. The faster it gets pushed out, the faster the rocket goes. Here's the important point: nowhere does Newton mention fire. He doesn't say 'throw hot stuff out the back to go forwards'; he just says 'throw stuff out the back to go forwards'. It doesn't have to be a blast of burning gases. Water will do the job just as well. This really is rocket science.

But, Water Rockets?

Yes, water rockets. The easiest way to find out what we're talking about is to try it. Time for an experiment.

Buy a can of cheap fizzy drink (make it as cheap as you can, because you aren't going to drink it), put on old clothes and go outside. Give the can a good shake, then throw it on the ground. Throw it at something pointy, like stones, so that the can bursts. What happens? Fizzy drink goes everywhere, that's what happens (that's why you're wearing those old clothes), but so does the can. When the pressure in the can shoots drink one way, the can goes the other way. That is a rocket. All we need is a more controllable way of putting the pressure in and letting it out again when we want to.

Time to Build a Rocket.

This is important: if you are going to make a rocket, you must be aware of the dangers. Water rockets are fast and can hit hard. You should take all the precautions you see fit. You have been warned.

Building a rocket isn't as hard as it sounds, but we will need some specialist items:

> A fizzy pop bottle (any size, but it must have contained something fizzy - the bottles that hold still drinks are not as strong)

> A cork or rubber bung the right size to fit very snuggly into the neck of the bottle (they can be bought from some brewing supply shops, found in junk shops or scrounged off friendly science teachers)

> A bicycle pump (foot or hand, either is fine)

> A football inflation adaptor (the long spike that connects onto the pump and slides into the football's bladder - they cost a few pence from sports shops)

> Some water

> A couple of bricks

> Safety goggles are also a very good idea, as the plastic bottles can burst, although this is rare. You are more likely to get clipped by a flying bung or a ricocheting rocket

The most difficult part is getting the adaptor through the bung. If you are using a cork, you will have to drill through the cork (use the narrowest drill-bit you can), insert the adaptor and seal around it with silicon sealer. Some people use a rubber bung. To pierce the bung, heat a narrow nail to red heat with a blow torch (holding it with pliers!), push it through the bung and pull it straight back out. Very quickly, push the adaptor through the same hole while the rubber is still hot. After a few moments, the rubber will have cooled and set to make a good seal around the adaptor. Now it's time to test it.

(Alternative method (which I have not tried) is to freeze the rubber bung (24 hours in your icebox), and then drill it with a narrow bit.)

Stand the empty bottle right way up in a bucket, push in the bung and connect your pump. Give several pumps. The bottle should creak and shift slightly as the pressure builds. Stop and listen. Can you hear a hiss? Quiet, high-pitched hisses are fine, because the bottle does not need to hold pressure very long. Louder, deeper hisses are also not usually cause for panic, but if you can't cure them with extra sealant you will have to pump very fast to launch your rocket.

Pump some more. And more. It should not take long, but after about ten to twenty pumps (depending on pump and bottle), the bung will suddenly shoot out of the bottle with a bang. Your basic rocket is finished.

Launching the Water Rocket.

Launching a water rocket is an outdoors activity, as they have been known to go up to 100m high, and this Researcher lost a couple a street or two away from the schoolyard they were launched from.

Half-fill your bottle with water, insert the bung, and prop it up with the bricks (upside down now, so that the water shoots downwards). You should have bricks all round the bottom to stop it slipping, and the bottle should not be tilted more than 30 degrees from the vertical (look at a clock face - the rocket should not launch 'before' 11am or 'after' 1pm), preferably pointing slightly into any wind-blowing.

Attach the pump, and go for it. Do not lean over the bottle! You will see the air bubble into the bottle and feel the pressure building up. It will not take as long as the test because there is less space for the air to fit. When the pressure pushes the bung out, it will also push the water out.

Remember Newton? As the water rushes down and out, the bottle whizzes up and away. Rapidly - that's why you didn't lean over it. Water rockets have been known to reach altitudes of 100 metres (300 feet) - they aren't kiddy toys!

Recovering the Water Rocket

Now that it's empty, the bottle is fairly light, so it doesn't need a parachute, but it can still give people underneath a nasty crack if they aren't paying attention. Watch carefully as it falls, just in case a gust of wind carries it away.

Improvements to the Water Rocket

You will have noticed that your bottle tumbled as it flew. Adding fins made of card or cut from another bottle will help it fly truer and further. Try streamlining it with a nose-cone made of card, or carved from polystyrene. Fix all these with duck tape, epoxy or hot-glue. Remember, you are not allowed to have exposed metal on the outside of any amateur rockets flown in the UK or USA (that's the law).

Can you create a recovery system? Parachutes, rotors and fixed or folding wings have all been used to keep them in the air longer.

You will also find that adjusting the amount of water in your rocket will change the range, but I'll leave that up to you to investigate.
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ElvenChild says: Dec 3, 2012. 3:45 AM
Hey Kiteman, I'm having a bit of a problem with the match stick rocket, and was wondering if you could help? I've tried it twice now, and both times I've ended up with semi-flaming (technically it was the match head that was flaming) foil. I'm wondering if this means I need to use more foil, or is it something else?

Thanks for your time.
-ElvenChild
Kiteman (author) in reply to ElvenChildDec 3, 2012. 9:33 AM
My first thought is to recommend more foil.

Make sure the rocket is capable of actually launching, and isn't too tight on the match intended to stay behind.
iceng says: Nov 24, 2012. 10:16 PM
My only match rocket experience is using a meter long lab glass tube fire sealed at one end
held secure at an appropriate up angle to allow a stick match to slide head down and ignite 
at the molten glass end.

The expanding gas makes an excellent simply  re-loadable mortar able to easily launch sticks
as far as10 meters away.

A
Kiteman (author) in reply to icengNov 25, 2012. 12:19 AM
A matchstick mortar...?

Ohhh...
ride on toy dude says: Oct 7, 2012. 11:12 AM
Ahh Burt Rutan. He is my role model.
(Along with Mr. Steve; )
redcrate says: Jun 5, 2012. 10:21 PM
Baking Soda and Vinegar is a lot more fun and costs less:

http://www.instructables.com/id/Film-Container-CO2-Rocket./
Kiteman (author) in reply to redcrateJun 6, 2012. 3:34 AM
This is a lot less messy, though, and (when you've got a class of thirty 11 year-olds doing this) it makes the risk-assessment paperwork easier to have water splashing instead of acidic vinegar.

Oh, and isn't it about time you posted another project? ;-)
Pfarmkid says: Feb 27, 2012. 5:20 AM
What do they call Boy Scout of America across the pond or is it just Boy Scouts or just Scouts
Kiteman (author) in reply to PfarmkidFeb 27, 2012. 7:12 AM
Here, in the birth-place of Scouting, we just call it "Scouting" (since girls are allowed to join as well).
Pfarmkid says: Feb 27, 2012. 5:09 AM
you should put the football adapter in the other way then it in the end of a soda bottle and shake it up it would directionalize the spew of expanding soda and cause it too fly higher thank a bike pump
Delo97 says: Oct 9, 2011. 3:35 PM
I've got an idea
Using some ultra-tech hi-cost toilet paper, you could separate the AS from the water... until it's flipped. Then, they would come in contact, and... BOOM! An instant, easy to carry AS rocket! Just take care not to flip it as an accident.
OMFG TOILET PAPER FTW!!1!!!11!!1!one!!eleven!!!!11!1!!!.png
Kiteman (author) in reply to Delo97Oct 10, 2011. 4:36 AM
Yes, that works well.
Delo97 in reply to Delo97Oct 9, 2011. 3:36 PM
Also, sorry for the horrible drawing, it was done on MS Paint with a mousepad.
-Aj- says: Apr 27, 2008. 10:17 PM
oh hai i is potassium nitrate? kno3 sugar rockets... the best kind cheap, easy quick and plenty of thrust... if you makem properly. blackpowder is also cool, just started playing with some, is fun!
Kiteman (author) in reply to -Aj-Apr 28, 2008. 1:08 PM
Yes, potassium nitrate is KNO3 , also known as saltpetre or salt peter.

Apparently it can be found as "stump remover".
ilpug in reply to KitemanJul 14, 2009. 7:59 PM
or you can boil down pee to make it...
uberzombiebob in reply to ilpugApr 15, 2011. 11:44 AM
or you can get it from the internet. inoxia chemical supplies do a reasonable deal.
scarabeetle101 in reply to ilpugMar 14, 2010. 10:46 AM
 I'm sure that's phosphorus - and it takes gallons of pee, high temperatures and a lot of time to make tiny amounts.

Saltpetre is made by regularly pouring large amounts of urine on a pile of cow dung and straw as it rots down for a few weeks.

Don't ask me how they discovered either of those things. (Actually, I know the first one - it was an alchemist who thought that because of its colour, urine must contain gold.)
lperkins in reply to scarabeetle101Nov 28, 2011. 1:59 PM
The second one is because saltpetre is highly soluble in water and, as such, tends to collect around the upper edges of undisturbed manure piles as the water evaporates out of them.
StuNutt in reply to ilpugFeb 28, 2010. 10:11 AM
I guess we need an Instructable on this . . . . . . Okay, first I need to drink about 10 pints of Old Knackers Heavy Bitter . . . . . . then . . . . . ??

(and don't forget the pictures of every stage  :LOL: )
freakmonkey in reply to KitemanMay 16, 2008. 12:13 PM
Potassium nitrate can also be extracted from many natural sources, such as nitrate bearing earth.
ArvindTheNinja in reply to freakmonkeyDec 14, 2008. 1:29 PM
if u mix KNO3 with sugar and then burn it u get a buttload of smoke
ilpug in reply to ArvindTheNinjaApr 15, 2011. 10:11 PM
pee aside, KNO3 CAN be found as stump remover, in america at least, idk about the rest of the globe.
thomasthetankengine says: Feb 20, 2011. 6:50 PM
Whoa sweet Kiteman! Are you from the U.K? People from their are always cool =P
Kiteman (author) in reply to thomasthetankengineFeb 21, 2011. 1:00 AM
I am.

Cool? I try.
thomasthetankengine in reply to KitemanFeb 21, 2011. 11:33 AM
Haha. I think you are one of the best people on Instructables right now! I love this website so much. Me and my friend were making Altoids Tin boats all day yesterday!
Kiteman (author) in reply to thomasthetankengineFeb 21, 2011. 12:09 PM
I hope you took plenty of photos to write up a step-by-step Instructable?
thomasthetankengine in reply to KitemanFeb 27, 2011. 2:50 PM
Actually, we used this one that's already posted, then did a little tweaking and improv.

http://www.instructables.com/id/Rubber-Band-Powered-Altoids-Boat/

Sorry can't make links for some reason...my computer can but I forgot how. =) Copy and paste it?
Thomas MSwift says: Feb 15, 2011. 1:43 PM
Had it been MY article, this step would have been the very first one...maybe more general in order to not share EVERYTHING you were doing!
Kiteman (author) in reply to Thomas MSwiftFeb 15, 2011. 2:07 PM
I see your point, but piling on the nanny stuff up-front tends to put people off, and it's generally assumed that readers will go through *all* the steps before actually following them.

Thomas MSwift says: Feb 15, 2011. 1:40 PM
A mortar is actually closer kin to a cannon...modern mortars use a twelve-gauge shotgun shell minus the shot to power a fin-stabilized projectile. The mortar shell looks like a rocket due to its shape and its fins.
lulu10 says: Nov 28, 2010. 5:17 PM
this is all $#!% teehee hee ^_*
Kiteman (author) in reply to lulu10Nov 29, 2010. 3:58 AM
I hope that's a wink on the end...
omgomgomglol^^ says: Nov 14, 2010. 4:02 PM
someone really neads to make a instructable on water roket launchers for BIG rockets.i cant find a one thats compatible w/ the one in the instructable cynobite made!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! please?
Kiteman (author) in reply to omgomgomglol^^Nov 15, 2010. 9:27 AM
Got a link?
omgomgomglol^^ says: Nov 14, 2010. 4:29 PM
cooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooollllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll! 6 stars! (i dont care if theres no such thing)
Jezza Bear says: Feb 26, 2007. 1:07 PM
Hi That is interesting, Instead of a rubber bung and a football pump valve, when I did this I used to use a Woods bicycle tyre valve and the actual cap of the bottle. I drilled a hole the same diameter of the Woods valve and then wrapped a small amount of paper masking tape around it and inserted it into the cap. Same method as you but when the pressure was too much it forced the valve out of the cap. To stop tumbling we used to get a 50 foot length of plastic coated clothes line and then duct taped a copper tube to the rocket and fed the clothes line through it. It was a tad safer and was guided
rainger in reply to Jezza BearMay 31, 2007. 6:27 AM
Copper tubing? Dangerous! Read the Instructable again, metal is illegal. Have Fun!! - but be careful!
SJU87 in reply to raingerMay 17, 2010. 4:51 AM
I believe he meant the copper tube was attached to the outside of the bottle, the clothesline passed through it, and then tie the clothesline off at both ends.  The bottle then rides along the clothesline.  A good solution for school teachers with administration that is sensitive to rockets or other things that go up in the air as in our school system where the kids have to use tennis balls to play baseball - "so no one gets hurt."
Jezza Bear in reply to SJU87May 17, 2010. 5:09 AM
That is correct SJU87, it is taped to the outside of the bottle as a guide
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