Slashdot Mirror


Amateur Rocket to Carry Ham Radio Payload to Space

n1ywb writes "An amateur rocket team this month will attempt to send a 21-foot-tall rocket carrying a ham radio avionics package into the fringes of space. The launch by the Civilian Space Xploration Team (CSXT) could occur as early as Monday, May 17. Some 20 months ago, the last CSXT try to reach space ended some three seconds after launch when the rocket's engine exploded. Avionics Team Leader Eric Knight, KB1EHE, says CSXT has since rebounded from that devastating blow with a newer, bigger vehicle. In terms of Amateur Radio, the GoFast rocket will transmit telemetry on the 33-cm amateur band and Amateur TV at 2.4 GHz using a high-quality color camera. The avionics also incorporate multiple global positioning system (GPS) systems to record the vehicle's precise location and flight path, redundant data acquisition and storage systems, and a variety of data sensors. Plans call for the solid-fuel rocket to zip upward from the desert floor and reach a speed of more than 4000 MPH in about 9 seconds. The suborbital vehicle will attain an altitude of 100 km or 62 statute miles--high enough to be considered 'space'--linger there for a couple of minutes then arc back to Earth some 26 miles down range. The whole thing will take somewhat less than a half-hour. If successful it would mark the first amateur rocket launch into space."

6 of 222 comments (clear)

  1. Familiar Development Process by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Hey, it blew up!"
    "Guess we better build a bigger one."

    Sounds like management at my company...

  2. Significant by Tuna_Shooter · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think most people don't realize the this is the FIRST non- governmental private ametuer vehicle to reach space. That by itselt is a VERY important milestone. I wish them well. !!

    --
    *--- Sometimes a majority only means that all the fools are on the same side. ---*
  3. Bah, amateur space enthusiasts... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Funny


    The amateur anti-missle defense club will try to shoot it down.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  4. Re:I suppose the X-prize is out the question by ScottGant · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Then again, those three guys you jest at actually did a cool thing. They dreamt about something and they up and made it. And it wasn't a cheap and easy feat either.

    In this cynical world where people crap on anything and everything someone else does...yet they themselves do nothing but sit and surf the web, it's refreshing to see someone actually BUILD something they think is cool, just for the sake of building it.

    --

    "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
  5. Re:Only 100km? Whew... Well my $1000 is safe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't know about CATS, but the X-prize (before Ansari stepped up) was funded by insurance -- basically, the X Prize foundation found an insurance company willing to gamble that no one would be successful and the prize wouldn't be awarded. The time limit was necessary before the insurers would assume the risk.

  6. About the launch site... by ikluft · · Score: 5, Informative
    I talked with some of CSXT's Avionics Team about what would happen when this went up on Slashdot. And here it is. We figured it's inevitable that some people will try to show up even though it's short notice and a really inhospitable location.

    Bear in mind that the launch site is far away from populated areas on purpose. Over there in the deep desert, that presents a survival issue for anyone who comes unprepared. There is no city infrastructure that most people are used to - it's a wilderness. If you wander off and get lost and stuck, you may survive for days but not be discovered for weeks. That's why you should take this seriously.

    Cell phones do not work out there. It's well over an hour's drive from the nearest cell site. Amateur Radio and satellite phones are the only reliable communications out there. If you don't have those, don't wander away from the paved roads and the launch site.

    So if I haven't scared you away yet, here's some info that hopefully will help you survive out there. Remember that in the desert, bring your own drinking water - and lots of it. I have a web page about the Black Rock Desert. I have a page with a minimal camping checklist. Even if you're planning to stay in a motel, bring enough camping gear to survive overnight and wait for a rescue if you get stuck. (Overnight temperatures are usually in the 20's and 30's this time of year.) But don't go wandering off where no one knows to look for you. And lastly, see our page about "How to avoid needing a rescue at Black Rock", which we wrote after participating in many rescues of stranded people out there.

    I'm going to be out there with the Stratofox Aerospace Tracking & Recovery Team. We consider it an enormous privilege that CSXT has invited us to assist at their launch.