Building a Guided Rocket to Hit Mach 3

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @k-panga
    @k-panga 17 дней назад +3319

    Sir, i think we have very different definitions of "No effort". This is top quality.

    • @Dinnye01
      @Dinnye01 17 дней назад +61

      It's like Alec from Technology Connections in No Effort November.

    • @Nishye501
      @Nishye501 17 дней назад +24

      Yeah, I didn’t even know razer and nvidia did yt sponsorships

    • @TornadoTromboss
      @TornadoTromboss 17 дней назад +15

      a video like this is not done in 5 days.

    • @jessicahunt6569
      @jessicahunt6569 16 дней назад

      @@Nishye501 razer sponsors like everyone and their friends. mostly on twitch I guess, but I know several small time streamers and they have all had or are sponsored by razer. imo though, their products are trash, for the money you can do a lot better, but i guess thats because most of the moeny is in marketing :)

    • @alfonsopayra
      @alfonsopayra 16 дней назад +5

      HHAHAHAHAHAHAH AGREEEEEE... this dude is amazing.

  • @NickSchade
    @NickSchade 16 дней назад +182

    Two things for working with epoxy:
    1: Masking tape is your friend. For running the wires up the tube, a strip of tape on either side of the wires would keep excess off the surface. Additionally the tape could be used as a guide for your forming tool.
    2: If you want to use a filler such as Kevlar powder in your epoxy but don’t like the rough surface, wait a bit for the epoxy to set up after shaping, then wipe it down with some denatured alcohol to smooth the surface. Wait for the epoxy to be stiff enough to stay in place, but still soft enough to be shaped. The alcohol softens the surface slightly allowing it to move more. Just using your gloved finger, wet with alcohol, will make the surface nice and smooth. This is a common practice in boatbuilding fillets.

    • @alexdrockhound9497
      @alexdrockhound9497 16 дней назад +6

      Also, for getting a good bond to aluminum, hit it with some coarse grit sandpaper.

  • @cinobro6393
    @cinobro6393 17 дней назад +2321

    “No effort November” “Technical deep dive”

    • @caljcam
      @caljcam 17 дней назад +36

      Which is absolutely in keeping with tradition

    • @StefanHanrath
      @StefanHanrath 17 дней назад +21

      "High effort sheetpost"

    • @sammaldonado5931
      @sammaldonado5931 16 дней назад +2

      ​@@caljcam Oh yeah!

    • @LerrySanders
      @LerrySanders 16 дней назад +5

      This is the low effort I approve of

    • @VillainOfBrandon
      @VillainOfBrandon 16 дней назад +4

      Yeah he started Technical Deep Dive December too early.

  • @charlieguenther5490
    @charlieguenther5490 16 дней назад +57

    A friend of mine worked for Saab and they found out the hard way that CA can interfere with electrical connections on the JAS 39 Gripen aircraft. As far as I know its safe to pot a wire with it however its imperative to keep it far away from connecters or contacts. Given the cost and complexity of my work learning this forced me to rethink how I used CA in the future. Keep up the great work! You do things that are inspirational. Thankyou...

    • @arfink
      @arfink 16 дней назад +2

      Heat shrink is good. :) Vibration and CF don't play nicely, and the lower adhesion to metal vs plastic is an issue.

    • @kruszielski
      @kruszielski 3 дня назад

      @@arfink I was about to comment the same. A few cents can save you thousands.

  • @tracer_755
    @tracer_755 17 дней назад +1655

    "We have Lockheed at home"

    • @AffectionateLocomotive
      @AffectionateLocomotive 16 дней назад +16

      The Martin lockheed at home:

    • @stephenkonstantinou6218
      @stephenkonstantinou6218 16 дней назад +23

      To be fair he probably has better QA than Lockheed

    • @zee-fr5kw
      @zee-fr5kw 16 дней назад +6

      @@stephenkonstantinou6218he doesn't have an assembly line so QA is irrelevant

    • @Jonathan-ex3sl
      @Jonathan-ex3sl 16 дней назад

      @@stephenkonstantinou6218QA is a boring problem, Lockheed problem is over promise in contracts and don’t deliver

    • @Daniel-jk7pe
      @Daniel-jk7pe 16 дней назад

      ​@@zee-fr5kw🤓

  • @mircofranchetti2239
    @mircofranchetti2239 15 дней назад +67

    The fact that your "no effort November" appears to contain more effort than my entire life seems alarming and inspiring at the same time.
    Keep it up!

    • @MalcAla01
      @MalcAla01 3 дня назад

      Phew I'm not the only one.

  • @oreoking7610
    @oreoking7610 17 дней назад +654

    "I might actually be stupid!" No, actually testing it on every step of the way was so smart. I aspire to be like you sir

    • @TlalocTemporal
      @TlalocTemporal 17 дней назад +18

      You have to be smart to be that stupid (and not cost yourself the entire project).

    • @ptonpc
      @ptonpc 17 дней назад +5

      Exactly. Testing is good, humans are humans, we all make mistakes and forget things.

    • @thirtythreeeyes8624
      @thirtythreeeyes8624 16 дней назад +3

      To be fair to his stupidity I'm pretty dumb myself and as soon as I saw him gluing those exposed wires to carbon I was screaming at the screen. Reminds me of my favorite quote “Mankind is made of two kinds of people: wise people who know they're fools and fools who think they are wise.” - Socrates

    • @arfink
      @arfink 16 дней назад +1

      So, he might be, because he dug out the leads, and covered them in CA, instead of like, using heat shrink. The CA will crack up under vibrational loading in flight, short out, and wheeeeeeee.
      Just use the bloody heat shrink, my dude. You will save yourself the tears.

    • @TlalocTemporal
      @TlalocTemporal 16 дней назад

      @@arfink -- It's encased in epoxy now, as long as there's a physical barrier between the CF and the wire, the physical strength shouldn't matter.
      Laying some epoxy in the grove before adding the wires might end up stronger though.

  • @lucasbrown712
    @lucasbrown712 4 дня назад +11

    as a woodworker, hearing you call birch "cheap" really put in perspective how much of a money pit rocketry must be

  • @100SteveB
    @100SteveB 17 дней назад +287

    I was so relieved when you realised your oversight about carbon fibre being conductive. from building carbon fibre framed quads i learned how careful you need to be.

    • @TomS699
      @TomS699 16 дней назад +16

      heatshrinking is fun, easy, and a good way to avoid this ( looks better too)

    • @spoyda
      @spoyda 16 дней назад +11

      @@TomS699 i was ripping my hair out seeing him not heatshrink those connections

    • @SpAm-AcCoUnT
      @SpAm-AcCoUnT 15 дней назад +2

      I was ripping apart an old laptop today for parts and I found a ribbon cable w/ graphite conductor traces. I’d have assumed it was a funky color of insulation or whatever until I remembered this video. Ripped the sandwich of plastic around it apart and sure enough, it wrote on paper. I love materials that take just that *little* bit more thinking. Delightful.

    • @shawnjoseph4009
      @shawnjoseph4009 15 дней назад +2

      Honestly I really appreciate that Joe is going to the effort to show everyone the safety you need to have when you work with this stuff. Sharp contrast to other youtubers who go "Safety? What's that lol"

    • @astone_ua
      @astone_ua 13 дней назад

      My thoughts exacly

  • @rublie1426
    @rublie1426 14 дней назад +14

    Please give us more of these style video's! I absolutely love it when you allow yourself to go into more detail about the technicalities instead of trying to make the video watchable for the larger audience. Not that I think this video won't be liked by the masses - I thought it was fantastic, but yeah: please more of this :)

  • @olsonspeed
    @olsonspeed 17 дней назад +467

    Carbon fiber dust can accumulate in wall outlets, power tools, and electronics causing shorts and destroving equipment . Boeing had a learning curve to develope methods of machining and decontamination when they started using carbon layups. Thanks for producing these facinating videos, good luck on your Mach 3 flight.

    • @AntiVaganza
      @AntiVaganza 17 дней назад +58

      They also seem to have a weirdly delayed learning curved when it comes to the task of not having planes drop out of the sky and killing people.

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund 17 дней назад +19

      I wonder if some kind of "tent" around the work area would help. I would be really scared of carbon fiber dust (and other kinds of grinding dust) accumulating on all the exposed surfaces inside that garage and inside all the irregularly shaped (= difficult to clean) cavities there.

    • @Blommefeldt
      @Blommefeldt 16 дней назад +5

      @@peterfireflylund Something like a paint booth is recommended. High airflow through filters.

    • @sasjadevries
      @sasjadevries 16 дней назад +6

      😂😂I knew it! When someone talks about Boeing, and how they've improved/learned something, someone else will point out how they've missed stuff on other occasions.
      😂

    • @thekraken1173
      @thekraken1173 16 дней назад +10

      Most importantly Carbon Fiber can accumulate in your lungs! Use proper protection while working with fiber composites.

  • @baslifico
    @baslifico 13 дней назад +9

    I do love Technology Connections, glad to find someone else who appreciates it.

  • @koztac
    @koztac 17 дней назад +543

    "Overvolting is great"
    -BPS Space Man

    • @gweo1817
      @gweo1817 17 дней назад +11

      - BePiS Space Man

    • @TheBackyardChemist
      @TheBackyardChemist 16 дней назад +4

      intel agrees

    • @SpacemanFPV1
      @SpacemanFPV1 16 дней назад +2

      yessir, overvolt life, climb an electric fence

    • @Real28
      @Real28 16 дней назад +1

      I overvolted my 10850k for 5 years, still working 😂

    • @TheBackyardChemist
      @TheBackyardChemist 16 дней назад

      @@Real28 10 000 series is bulletproof, but the 14900K self destructs on default settings after a year or two

  • @MakersMuse
    @MakersMuse 16 дней назад +3

    We use those servos in tiny combat robots too, they're beast! Enjoyed the manufacturing break down.

  • @MrCheeseWT
    @MrCheeseWT 17 дней назад +367

    No-effort November is a great idea, doesn’t take much work to make me happy with a BPS space video

    • @DrTheRich
      @DrTheRich 17 дней назад +7

      Except, you know, all the effort of actually building a rocket XD

    • @adora_was_taken
      @adora_was_taken 16 дней назад +2

      @@DrTheRich pssh, it's not like it's rocket science

    • @divermike8943
      @divermike8943 16 дней назад +2

      I don't know what he was talking about with No Effort November. Isn't this project an effort? Looks like one. Both the rocket and the video.

    • @divermike8943
      @divermike8943 16 дней назад +1

      Having designed composite parts at my job I couldn't help but cringe at seeing him machine composite laminate. He would need an autoclave, but the right way to make those fins is to lay up the plies on a tool to shape and cure under pressure. But he's not set up for that.

  • @drakkon_sol
    @drakkon_sol 16 дней назад +27

    I love the "Oh Woooooowwww" moment with the CF.
    That moment you realize you're thinking on level 8 but something at level 2 smacks you upside the head like "Hey DUMMY! Remember this??"

  • @TheCebulon
    @TheCebulon 17 дней назад +93

    This video doesn’t look a „no effort video“.
    You still put in effort to get us much informations and awesome shots.

  • @SklandytojasML
    @SklandytojasML 16 дней назад +4

    Great video! You might want to try adding a thixotropic agent (colloidal silica powder) when mixing epoxy for the fillets. It turns the resin into a gel-like form that won’t drip and holds its shape. This way, you wouldn’t need to wait an hour or more for the resin to hold its shape. Trust me, thixotropic agent is fantastic-you could even make a snowball-sized blob of epoxy and stick it to a wall! 😄 Thanks for the video!

  • @notadamkhan
    @notadamkhan 17 дней назад +475

    YOUVE GOT MY VOTE JOE

    • @NNZaero4066
      @NNZaero4066 17 дней назад +13

      His last name does start with a B, wait!

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 17 дней назад

      Wow he's so stupid re the carbon fiber being conductive!
      The sad part is if that makes him st00pid that makes me 10x more st00pid than I thought 😂

    • @ryans6280
      @ryans6280 17 дней назад +22

      B E P I S SPACE
      4 PRES

    • @Larock-wu1uu
      @Larock-wu1uu 17 дней назад +9

      Joe for president!

    • @SimonBauer7
      @SimonBauer7 15 дней назад +6

      honestly yes, i am all for it. better than the orange guy...

  • @awkragt
    @awkragt 14 дней назад +2

    Cans in warm water is also the trick to spray can texture for drywall repair. Also warm, not boiling. Learned that one the hard way.

  • @spacebeetle
    @spacebeetle 17 дней назад +40

    15:23 careful with those bare soldering points; carbon fiber composites are highly conductive
    LOL 16:40 one minute later you found out. Very attentive my man!

    • @feluke8396
      @feluke8396 15 дней назад +2

      Mine was more like "Doesn't bare joints in CF make a short circuit... yeap, 100% short is causing problems."

  • @andrewricci4481
    @andrewricci4481 13 дней назад +3

    I was yelling at the screen when I saw you weren't heat shrinking the servo wires initially. Glad you caught it!

  • @BedroomEngineering
    @BedroomEngineering 17 дней назад +46

    BPS videos are naturally good. A "no effort video" seems like the videos from other creators. Keep it Up Joe!

  • @chucksterock
    @chucksterock 16 дней назад +5

    I totally enjoyed this video as it felt more casual and personal. Sharing the good and bad works on many levels. Obviously we too can learn from your mistakes, but they also make you more human and relatable. Been there, done that. Keep up the great work, and stick with your safety protocols. Given the flammable chemicals and paints you have, you may want to consider a flammables cabinet. I kept watching auctions to pick one up much cheaper than new, and got lucky with a like new cabinet.

  • @MarkFunderburk
    @MarkFunderburk 17 дней назад +80

    I used to build a lot of drone frames on a cnc router and really liked doing it underwater, the finish was great and it was soooo quite too.
    It takes a bit of work to get a good system for doing it underwater though. I found a place that made semi custom stainless appliance drip trays.
    Got the biggest size that fit on my machine, and I bolted an aluminum t slot table down to the frame through the tray and sealed the holes with o-rings between the tray and my machine frame.
    This provides a nice solid surface you can attach to in various ways. Surprisingly the tape I used held up fine for a few hours under water.
    Add a drain to the tray and you are in business.
    Thanks for the distraction tonight!

    • @tristan7588
      @tristan7588 17 дней назад +5

      I've also cut carbon fiber parts underwater on a CNC router, and I just used a cheap thin baking tray. Drilled some holes in the carbon fiber and wasteboard material, and screwed through the carbon - wasteboard - baking tray stackup into a secondary MDF wasteboard. Worked well.

    • @hamjudo
      @hamjudo 16 дней назад

      Are there any effective wet sanding techniques that don't require putting the entire vehicle under water? Quite a few sanding steps were done after assembly.

    • @machineenvyllc437
      @machineenvyllc437 15 дней назад

      I made mine out of the vinyl drip mats used for showers.... just lined a table that had a 4 inch lip and set the machine in there. , then put some splash guards up..... double filtered. You would be surprised how quick carbon fiber clogs filters. I use some paper towel filters as a pre-filter.... it gets most of it out.... but have to be replaced nearly every session. Also 100% use fish-tail cutting bits.
      ruclips.net/video/U70rWAazc0Y/видео.htmlsi=UPQvOhJSD40JRjCF

  • @user-dhdirks
    @user-dhdirks 16 дней назад +2

    When I was a kid, I wanted to do what you are doing now. Little did I realize how much I did not know. Small model rockets were fun, but graduating to the big time is an amazing/complex effort. Thank you for your devotion to excellence and transparency!!

    • @bryanhoppe1481
      @bryanhoppe1481 10 дней назад +1

      @@user-dhdirks Same here! Grew up building semi-custom model rockets (semi means throwing away the instructions).
      While I never took the hobby to Joe's level, I did end up working in rocket science as a Prod-Ops Manager with LM Missiles & Fire Control. I've worked on several programs including PAC-3, HIMARS, ATACMS, PrSM and THAAD.

    • @user-dhdirks
      @user-dhdirks 10 дней назад

      @@bryanhoppe1481 Great story. In retrospect, my childhood fun experimenting with rocketry, electronics, etc. established my path--as it apparently did in yours. I ended up working at two DOE National Labs doing all kinds of interesting (and challenging) engineering and science. I wish more kids would find fun in STEM activities. Might change their career path and boost the nations need for scientists and engineers.

  • @Project-Horizon
    @Project-Horizon 17 дней назад +20

    Great video Joe. I always appreciate your transparency and honesty in the design process, makes it much more interesting!

  • @GavinGambletri
    @GavinGambletri 16 дней назад +1

    JoeyB out here with some high quality sponsors, love to see it!!
    I was really concerned to see those exposed servo leads touching carbon, but hilarious when you figured it out! Awesome work as always!

  • @paulfle
    @paulfle 17 дней назад +34

    Common power and ground could be used for the servos and the carbon could be utilised as the common ground. A copper mesh can be epoxied onto the carbon tube to attach the ground wires to. This would reduce the number of individual wires from the controller to the servos from 12 to 5. Maybe overkill at this point but if you have more components needing ground it would become more valuable to use the chassis as a ground and reduce the amount of wiring.

    • @robertwatson5400
      @robertwatson5400 16 дней назад +6

      Also, why not use heat shrink to isolate the wires from each other and the carbon fibre?
      That's pretty commonly how it's done for other non-recoket projects.

    • @kamel3d
      @kamel3d 16 дней назад +1

      @@robertwatson5400 yes he should have

  • @TotalBoat
    @TotalBoat 16 дней назад +2

    Awesome video! We are happy to hear Xyla was able to provide you some epoxy tips :)

  • @ThylineTheGay
    @ThylineTheGay 17 дней назад +31

    good to see a youtuber actually take respiratory safety seriously

    • @floriandreimann7964
      @floriandreimann7964 15 дней назад +6

      He tells that those fibers are very dangerous. Then he went outside and sands the stuff in his backyard. That made me very angry. As if the dust magiclly disappers in the free air. If his neighbors newborn gets cancer, its maybe because a fool is dispensing toxic dust over his neighhbourhood. really angry...

    • @TheExplosiveSheep
      @TheExplosiveSheep 14 дней назад +4

      @@floriandreimann7964 Indeed this channel is generally great, but that was incredible. "Carbon fiber dust is worse than asbestos, let me spread it all over my neighborhood"

  • @corypride5096
    @corypride5096 День назад

    Tight editing! Fun to learn about all your challenges for Mach3 and I'm glad to have rediscovered you after losing track for a year or two....

  • @phaeton5394
    @phaeton5394 17 дней назад +20

    At 3:25, That's a funny microphone you got right there. Must be some cool new technology!
    Edit: as I watch the video, your idea of what counts as a microphone astounds me

    • @PeregrineBF
      @PeregrineBF 16 дней назад +4

      Lavalier microphone clipped to something to hold onto. Could just wear the thing as intended, but sometimes you get better sound by holding it. And buying a handheld microphone is more money not spent on rockets…

  • @Aldo.flores
    @Aldo.flores 16 дней назад +1

    This gonna be epic! And a small advice, one of the very first things that I’ve learned at the engineering school: Every time you cut and solder an extension cable you need to seal it with termofit or any isolation method, in order to prevent shortcuts, discharges, electrical noise on the signals, etc, in this case this could result in a short cut of those expensive servos, and every penny counts.

  • @clayspurlock6849
    @clayspurlock6849 17 дней назад +14

    Hurray for another BPS video... and this one is 45 minutes? Rock On! loving no-effort-november so far!

  • @felix4807
    @felix4807 7 дней назад

    I would just like to thank you for producing such high-quality videos. It is unbelievable how much effort you are putting in. I studied aerospace engineering and this video shows what these studies are meant for.

  • @dev-debug
    @dev-debug 17 дней назад +61

    Years back the xjet channel mostly did videos on pulse jet engines. He decided he could make a pulse jet guided rocket and started working on it. The US government did not like the idea and called it a cruise missile, Enough pressure was put on New Zealand by the US that they banned his research. In the end he had to remove his all of his content off the internet and now only does r/c flying and drone content.
    Just a heads up, what is a hobby to one person may be considered a weapon by those in power.

    • @thezackast2752
      @thezackast2752 17 дней назад +21

      Tbf a guided pulse jet rocket sounds almost exactly like the V1 rocker, which was the original cruise missile. So the idea isn't unfounded.

    • @bilalbaig8586
      @bilalbaig8586 17 дней назад +7

      One man's pulse jet guided rocket is another man's cruise missile.

    • @ptonpc
      @ptonpc 17 дней назад +9

      A couple of other youtubers have run into that. Seems to be, as long as there is no way for the rocket or pulse jet to be guided, they are left alone.
      Xjet was more or less okay until 911 when there was a purge on available information on the internet (before then there were detailed blogs regarding pulse jets and other things).

    • @thirtythreeeyes8624
      @thirtythreeeyes8624 16 дней назад

      Didn't he call it a DIY cruise missile though? Lol, I love Xjet he's a legend in the hobby.

    • @kstricl
      @kstricl 16 дней назад

      Joe has already been running into these issues. Certain information we'd love to know is left out or blurred in past videos to prevent crossing into FBI investigation land.

  • @534jgm
    @534jgm 16 дней назад +1

    Great video again!! From one hobbyist to another, we typically embed a bronze(oil-lite) bushing into the carbon, then your pin is a precise fit into the bushing. This way you get minimal back lash and smoother operation. Cheap bronze stock from our McMaster friends 😉

  • @KCM25NJL
    @KCM25NJL 17 дней назад +13

    It's easy to admire the feats of engineering that SpaceX are accomplishing....... but I think I have even greater admiration for the Solo Engineer aiming for the vacuum. Bon chance!

    • @OrangeDurito
      @OrangeDurito 17 дней назад

      Definitely! What he has accomplished and continue to do for one person is simply astounding. Massive respect for his tenacity!

  • @aeckler01
    @aeckler01 13 дней назад

    I am a mechanical design engineer and design automated manufacturing equipment. Servos are how we get precise position, speed, and torque control. This is really so cool to see you applying all this to the rocket. I have learned a tremendous amount from this. Thanks. This is awesome.

  • @avigetsbored
    @avigetsbored 16 дней назад +16

    very fire my dood, i like. try out heat shrink tubing for your wires, unheatshrinked solder joints on a wire make my eyes itch sometime

    • @Noname-iq1gz
      @Noname-iq1gz 9 дней назад

      That’s the first thing I’ve thought about

  • @Quasarnova1
    @Quasarnova1 12 часов назад

    37:44 As someone who designed rail guides for a (almost) Mach 3 rocket, I feel so called out right now. Ours were made out of aluminum and the upper one bolted right into the motor adapter, while the lower one was initially epoxied to fin can, but that wasn't strong enough and we ended up using set screws to lock it in place. Your rail guides have a lot more contact area with the tube though, so they should be fine.

  • @lakshmiaparnathondapu2749
    @lakshmiaparnathondapu2749 17 дней назад +8

    YESSSSSS! YOU FINALY HIT MAC 3, CANT WAIT FOR IT GO TO SPACE

  • @b0land
    @b0land 16 дней назад +8

    In rocket surgery, you're either spec'd to a crewed vehicle or a crude vehicle. There's no middle ground.

  • @flexplexico480
    @flexplexico480 15 дней назад +3

    Great work Joe - Research "Western Union" solder joints - will be much more reliable than the old solder in midair method.

  • @GoranNaydenov-k4v
    @GoranNaydenov-k4v 13 дней назад

    Hey Joe, I am a huge fan of your channel and I have to say that I really love these longer format videos where you go much more into detail about your builds. Keep up the amazing work!! :)

  • @astudent4187
    @astudent4187 17 дней назад +27

    Grab your popcorn new bepis vid dropped

  • @PeregrineBF
    @PeregrineBF 16 дней назад +1

    For future builds, consider heat shrink over the solder joints, and also crimp the connectors onto the leads *after* they go through any holes (that allows drilling much smaller holes).

  • @kiwigurn
    @kiwigurn 17 дней назад +42

    Sweet, sweet relief

    • @andrewdoesyt7787
      @andrewdoesyt7787 17 дней назад

      Trump came in at just the right time to block America from having a female president for the only two attempts. He’s like a bouncer. Last year I voted for biden but this year proudly trump.

    • @jmrbear
      @jmrbear 17 дней назад +6

      Oh how I needed this.

    • @Z3BES
      @Z3BES 17 дней назад +8

      For real. I can actually feel my brain turning to mush right now. Needed a little science tonight

    • @mottys.4713
      @mottys.4713 17 дней назад +7

      yeah with all bad s*** going on now that’s a blessing ❤

    • @zachgarcia1482
      @zachgarcia1482 17 дней назад +4

      A tiny raft in a tumultuous sea

  • @futileskills
    @futileskills 14 дней назад

    Absolutely love the technical deep dive ❤ gave me a few ideas how to change up my rocket 😁 thanks man!

  • @paulhaynes8045
    @paulhaynes8045 16 дней назад +3

    I'm not a rocket enthusiast and certainly not a rocket builder, but I enjoy your videos. But I was a little disappointed that there was no actual rocket going at mach 3 at the end! OK, the title did say "building", but I naively thought - why build if you're not going to fly? Still, it was interesting, and even made me laugh in places (plus I had no idea carbon fibre is conductive!). The only downside is that I can't get the 'smell' of epoxy out of my head now!

  • @stephenharlan4126
    @stephenharlan4126 16 дней назад

    Joe, your engineering skills are outstanding, especially your testing along each step to ensure viability. Keep up the great work!

  • @dennydravis8758
    @dennydravis8758 16 дней назад +4

    Hey Joe, I know from robotics that those servos sometimes have a really bad thermal conductivity inside the housing
    If you can manage to machine the housing to add a screw fill port, you can flood them with clock makers oil. We used to do this on the high performance robotics servos for competition.
    Definitely try it on a damaged servo first though, we had a different model of servo that just died immediately when flooded.

  • @beachhouse13
    @beachhouse13 16 дней назад +1

    And just like Alec, you have turned No Effort November into a big video with a lot of effort. Way to go!!

  • @Benchpressr
    @Benchpressr 17 дней назад +6

    EPIC VID! as someone who works with carbon on a daily basis, please wear sleeves for your own sanity!! Carbon dust causes tons of skin irritation, often worse than fibreglass or other composites.
    A sleeve or dust protection cream would prevent this, and make sanding a much less painful process.
    Thanks for the vid!!

  • @hajotge12
    @hajotge12 7 дней назад

    I love that you explain the time-consuming steps too. ❤

  • @OldBodyYoungBrain
    @OldBodyYoungBrain 17 дней назад +10

    29:29 - I was all “no he dint!” Then I ran it back and was like “Daaaaaaaamn!” 😂😆🤣

  • @officiallygenix7382
    @officiallygenix7382 16 дней назад +1

    I fully thought this video was less than 42 minutes felt like 15 I swear, nice vid love learning about these things, I really wanna get into model rocketry

  • @stug77
    @stug77 17 дней назад +5

    Just waiting for the day this channel goes dark and we never find which 2nd world countries rocketry program BPS is heading.

  • @ungültigerAlias
    @ungültigerAlias День назад

    very interesting video about the servo test inside and outside spec. and load-time-test. very detailed. ty

  • @flintcoat2596
    @flintcoat2596 16 дней назад +10

    Great video! Enjoyed every minute! I have several suggestions for future builds:
    1). Ditch the Box Store drill bits. A suggested source is SMA Direct. Also, cobalt drills for carbon fiber! They can be sharpened sharper than the coated bits I recall you were using. American or Japanese manufacture.
    2). Fillets. Mount tube in lathe. Once fillets are formed rotate tube to even out the gravity's effect.
    3). Cable raceway 's. Tube mounted in lathe, use carriage to smooth and index raceway. Withdraw cross slide, and spin.
    3). After all carbon fiber work, cover entire vehicle with 0.7 ounce glass if weight is a concern, 2.0 if not, as 2 oz is easier to work with. Round areas, probably including raceway areas use sock glass to eliminate joints
    (I don't know if socks are readily available in small quantities)
    4). Use an automotive body/paint filler to cover imperfections.
    5). On copper nose cone, put a pointed spire to move shock wave away from your steak. Look at early Polaris, Trident, and most Soviet missiles for examples.
    5). While machining carbon fiber, cover as much of the machine as possible with double sided tape. Cover all electrical outlets and switches as well. Cover with painters tape first, and remove both tapes when finished, after cleaning work area!
    Carbon fiber seems to be attractive to electrical and WILL cause problems. I don't know what threshold is so be careful!
    I have enjoyed your content for a number of years. {Key word and tricky phrase)
    SEMPER FIDELIS
    BOB

  • @assassinlexx1993
    @assassinlexx1993 16 дней назад

    To made a down draft work surface . Make a rectangle wooden box, with one side made from peg board. On the side of the box make a hole for the shop vac. This create vacuum under the sanding surface. Good also for painting, to keep dust off.
    Wish you the best in your endeavors. 🎉

  • @jimanthimum
    @jimanthimum 17 дней назад +6

    thank you very much for your nerdy rambling

  • @T_Mo271
    @T_Mo271 16 дней назад +1

    I'm enjoying the wide variety of mic stands. Oh and the rocket is nice too.

  • @Real28
    @Real28 16 дней назад +7

    Technology Connections is one of my favorites!
    This series is gonna be good.

    • @Real28
      @Real28 15 дней назад

      Mach 3 got hands - this is a shirt

  • @15DjjC13
    @15DjjC13 16 дней назад +1

    When potting the cables along the length of the body you could use a indexing notch on the printed form squeegee and line up a vertical laser level along the run of wires to have a guide as you do the pull.

  • @crispy_338
    @crispy_338 17 дней назад +4

    Man I love Bepis Space Time

  • @ibg2004
    @ibg2004 3 дня назад

    Awesome video and commendable effort. A possible suggestion when soldering the servo motors is to use heat shrink to insulate the wires for a better piece of mind that the solder won’t break or the connections won’t short.

  • @sigstackfault
    @sigstackfault 16 дней назад +4

    5:05 "What if we tried using more power?"

  • @theelectricwalrus
    @theelectricwalrus 16 дней назад +1

    Joe! You're using drilling guides like I've been trying to get you to do for YEARS

  • @NNZaero4066
    @NNZaero4066 17 дней назад +38

    Not a missile though, right? RIGHT?!

    • @MrGreenStellar
      @MrGreenStellar 17 дней назад +4

      „The Missile knows where it is, because it knows where it isn’t“

    • @CBWP
      @CBWP 16 дней назад +5

      All things with guidance switch from rockets to missiles...

    • @courier6634
      @courier6634 16 дней назад +1

      Yep, it's an SCGM. (Steak Cooking Guided Missile)

    • @bryanhoppe1481
      @bryanhoppe1481 10 дней назад

      @@CBWP That's not accurate. I've worked on the GMLRS guided rockets at LM in Precision Fires, specifically the M30 and M31 guided rocket munitions, as well as the ATACMS and PriSM.
      They two terms can, and are, used interchangeably.

    • @CBWP
      @CBWP 10 дней назад +1

      @@bryanhoppe1481 ok "normally" rockets are not guided. They seem to have to have a name that forms a good acronym as well.

  • @finnooogaming2319
    @finnooogaming2319 15 дней назад

    You sir are an inspiration to us all, through both the successes and possibly even more so through your minor setbacks!

  • @ProjectFlasche
    @ProjectFlasche 14 дней назад +1

    Hey man!
    I love your video's, super creative and fun to watch.
    I dont know why my silly mind is commenting this, but u could use a spinning wheel on the end of each fin to make it spin when its going fast.
    So when the rocket goes up, gets more speed, the wheel starts turning really really fast.. that makes an gyroscopic effect to make the rocket stabilize itself.
    It's used on the Aim-9 sidewinder missle, if u search it up u would probably find it..
    Dont know what u can do with this information, but i thought it would be cool.

  • @corypride5096
    @corypride5096 15 дней назад

    Well crafted video! Nice flow and pace. I subscribed.

  • @astroZ45
    @astroZ45 15 дней назад

    I’m so glad that was a pure passion project video for you ie, “no effort”, because that was amazing. Clearly your video skills are at an amazing level now. Or I’m just easy to please!😂

  • @martrich1098
    @martrich1098 16 дней назад +1

    To be honest.... on a day like today, a long deep dive into making rocket airframes is EXACTLY what I need - thank you

    • @daisystabs5502
      @daisystabs5502 12 дней назад

      Fbi I think you need to watch this man😭

  • @aschwally
    @aschwally 16 дней назад

    Really appreciate you sharing all the wins and fails (learning experiences!) as you do this, Joe! Ad astra per aspera. And you really do make excellent videos 👍

  • @Nemozoli
    @Nemozoli 13 дней назад

    I work designing and building UAVs, and when you put the unshielded servo cables onto the CF fin, I was screaming at the monitor "Noooo!" :)

  • @Travisty75
    @Travisty75 9 дней назад

    A tip I learned cutting EPS foam cores for an aerospace company I worked at: instead of running your parallel/raster toolpath along the fin edge, run it across and use a square tool instead of a ball. You'll maintain surface footage out at the major diameter of the square tool versus significantly less cutter speed closer to the center like a ball endmill would deliver.

  • @indisputablefacts8507
    @indisputablefacts8507 14 дней назад

    One of my best friends while soldering is heat shrink tubing to get you the electrical isolation and wire wrangling.

  • @mirzamahboob393
    @mirzamahboob393 14 дней назад

    31:24 you can use heat shrink sleeves , that is more clean than an electric tape , but there must be a reason why you are not using it.
    Any ways luv you Joe, Appreciate your patience and passion for rockets. Best of luck🤞

  • @samuraijaydee
    @samuraijaydee 13 дней назад +1

    Just continuity tested my EDC's CF scales.... BBBEEEPP! Wow, should've know that!

  • @AlessandroRuspi
    @AlessandroRuspi 16 дней назад

    This man puts an ungodly ammount of effort in these videos, you are doing great

  • @lightlegion_
    @lightlegion_ 10 дней назад

    It was a delight to meet you!

  • @clonkex
    @clonkex 16 дней назад +1

    36:36 YES those free-standing hammocks are great!

  • @lewsdiod
    @lewsdiod 16 дней назад

    Hecking hero, always a nice surprise! Endlessly engaging. Lookign forward to the next! Best,

  • @gijoe1of3
    @gijoe1of3 16 дней назад +1

    Please do way more like this! This video is great!

  • @alttabby3633
    @alttabby3633 16 дней назад

    Hey my dude, I appreciate you prompting safety equipment when handling and sanding these materials. I recommend you getting a full face respirator. The safety glasses you are using are great for deflecting debris but are much less capable at keeping dust particles out of your eyes.

  • @Cohiba2
    @Cohiba2 16 дней назад

    If this was no effort, dear sir keep it up this was a great video and always always follow your heart on "I really really want to do it" that is when we have the most fun and avoid burn out.

  • @GwenScogin
    @GwenScogin 16 дней назад

    I did have a couple of thoughts watching the build. when you epoxy the servo horns onto the tabs, it would probably be easier to do them first and let them cure before you attach them to the servos. Also just use some heat shrink tubing on the servo wires.

  • @steair
    @steair 16 дней назад

    Highest effort no-effort video I've seen. Love it!

  • @KevinCarstens
    @KevinCarstens 16 дней назад

    For the fillets, have you considered making a silicone mold? Silicone will leave a clean and smooth surface finish, you can use your kevlar mixed into epoxy and still end up with a good finish. The creation of the mold would probably take some time but offset the amount of wiping and cleaning while also reducing waste. The mold will also be highly reusable.

  • @jormam69
    @jormam69 16 дней назад

    I'm not sure if you've already used up this rocket, but I have a tip for you. You noticed that the surface of the rocket looks awful after painting. I'm not sure how common it is, but you can use it to your advantage. At least in automotive body work, when filler is used and is sanded so it feels correct, primer is applied. The first coats always reveal imprefections. You then simply sand again, coat again and see how it looks. It definitely takes time, but it is fairly simple and you can get very smooth surfaces, which in your case also means better aerodynamics, not just looks

  • @ArrakisMusicOfficial
    @ArrakisMusicOfficial 16 дней назад +2

    Joe, I've been watching you for years now, and with this video it really hit me how far you've come. You started out as a video professional nerd with an impostor syndrome who was spooked by equations and yolo'd his way into launching some rockets and capturing it on video. Who I see now is a real engineer (degree or not) with a lot of real world experience, who tests dilligently everything he reasonably can on the ground and uses a measured and patient approach to achieving his goals. Aaand also still a video professional who brings us along the way. It's amazing to watch you grow and I wish you all the best on your journey!!!

  • @Voulltapher
    @Voulltapher 15 дней назад

    Honestly I like this video format way better than what you usually do.

  • @ichbrauchmehrkaffee5785
    @ichbrauchmehrkaffee5785 16 дней назад

    honestly, this is exactly the type of video I allways looked forward to, but never really got.
    It allways felt like I was missing out on something

  • @Oysteims
    @Oysteims 16 дней назад

    I can wholehartedly recommend using "non insulated butt splice" connectors for wire-to-wire splicing instead of handsoldering them. For Aerospace and Space applications the TE MiniSeal splices are common, but pricy. However, just normal non insulated butt splice for 24-22 awg or whatever size you use with a piece of heat shrink will work just as well.
    The crimper (3137CT) is a buy once cry once tool, but if you're doing a lot of wire splices a quality crimper and tinned butt splices are a lifesaver compared to soldering.

  • @gedaliakoehler6992
    @gedaliakoehler6992 15 дней назад

    Great video. Looking forward to hearing about the simulation and control work. Gbye.

  • @devinholland2189
    @devinholland2189 15 дней назад

    Those giant paint cans can have the tip swapped out with a regular tip if you didn't know.
    I use an air powered sander for fiberglass as its completely water proof so working under a sprinkler will keep the dust contained.

  • @rickymartinez2663
    @rickymartinez2663 15 дней назад

    Joe have you ever thought of creating a course from absolute beginner to super advanced? I know I would buy it 100%. I started doing rocketry this month because of your channel. How many people feel like me? How many people outside of this spectrum would like to learn like you. I think it's a great business idea.