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REV 2.4 - Sun Oct 24 00:03:52 2010

Plans
Art Applewhite Rockets
Micro Maxx Qubit
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SPECS: 3.0" x 4.0" - .2 oz
ROCKSIM FILE: MISSING - please submit here
SpaceCAD FILE: MISSING - please submit here
REC'D MOTORS: MMX

Rating
(Contributed - by Matt Gillard [Who's Who Page] - 03/21/06) Art Applewhite Scimitar MMX

Brief:
Having built all of Art Applewhite's 13mm paper rockets, I'd thought I'd have a go at the baby versions: the tiny MMX paper rockets. There are four per sheet, two Qubits (one called dicey), a Scimitar, and a Stealth. They are nearly the same as their bigger brothers except they are vented at their apex--MMX motors don't come in a plugged version. This review is for the MMX Scimitar.

Construction:
The kit is contained on a single A4 sheet with four rockets on it.

There are no instructions on the page, but the MMX Scimitar builds like it's bigger version. With only three parts though, it doesn't take much figuring out.

Cut out all the parts and score the dotted lines with the back of a craft knife guided by a steel ruler while taking care not to score too deep.

Make the motor mount by wrapping the paper around a spent MMX case and then take the case out immediately. The engine block is quite tricky to make, as the width is only a few millimeters wide. After all the pieces have dried, glue the block in the mount and the mount in the body.

Fillet carefully and don't use much glue as this is a very light rocket. The whole process takes about 15-20 minutes to complete.

Finishing:
I usually spray paint Art's rockets, but as these are so small and light that I didn't bother with the first few. I was a little worried that the extra mass could affect the rocket's flight, however, I have spray painted a few and the paint doesn't affect the flight noticeably.

Construction Rating: 5 out of 5

Flight:
With the very low power of Quest's MMX motors and the relatively large surface area of the rocket, I was not expecting a huge altitude.

On the first flight the rocket went straight up with a good spin. I guess the height was between 20-25 feet. It landed literally on the pad. Perfect. Second and third flights were with a another Scimitar rocket (as I've built 14 MMX rockets this week). Each flight was the same as the first except they don't all land on the pad.

Recovery:
It comes down on featherweight/tumble recovery. You could launch this in a gale and it couldn't land far from the pad.

Flight Rating: 5 out of 5

Summary:
Well it's free. The fights aren't spectacular, but it performs well every time. Everyone should try one--just for the cute factor if nothing else.

Overall Rating: 5 out of 5


Rating
(Contributed - by Blake Eric DeMarcy - 07/31/08)

Brief:
A super simple Micromaxx rocket. It is free for all at Art Applewhite's website.

Construction:
All you need is a sheet of cardstock. This review is for the dicey and qubit.

The sheet comes printed with four rockets on it: the dicey, qubit, stealth, and scimitar. No instructions are included but these are so simple! Just cut one out, fold here, fold there, glue here, glue there, done.

Finishing:
No finishing is needed, but if you want more color than white just use colored cardstock. The dicey already has "die" markings on it so it looks like a die. I built the dicey.

Construction Rating: 5 out of 5

Flight:
The Dicey made three flights to date. All were on a cull-de-sac and we had no recovery problems. Flights hit 50 feet max. Very stable.

Recovery:
The dicey simply floats down and lands very close to the pad every time. No recovery system to fail.

Flight Rating: 5 out of 5

Summary:
Me likes! These are so simple and best of all, its free! You have nothing to lose. Give it a shot!

Overall Rating: 5 out of 5

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[Enter Flight Log]
Date Name Motor Ejection/
Altitude
Wind Notes
07-30-2008 Blake DeMarcy Qst MMX Just Before 0-5 mph winds Dicey - Dicey-First flight, about 50 feet high on the dicey
07-30-2008 Blake DeMarcy Qst MMX Just Before 0-5 mph winds Dicey - dicey-same as above
07-30-2008 Blake DeMarcy Qst MMX Just Before 0-5 mph winds Dicey - dicey-same as above two
03-19-2006 Matt Gillard Qst MMX None - Tumble 0-5 mph winds scimitar pink - Nice spin on the way up, landed near pad.
03-19-2006 Matt Gillard Qst MMX None - Tumble 0-5 mph winds scimitar pink - Good flight.
03-19-2006 Matt Gillard Qst MMX None - Tumble 0-5 mph winds RIP scimitar pink - Good flight, 35 foot. Status: Retired
04-08-2005 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm Qubit - Perfect rocket for backyard flight. Predictable consistent flight
04-08-2005 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm Scimitar - Another perfect backyard flyer
05-19-2005 Bob Harrington Qst MMX Apogee - Perfect Calm Scimitar - A typical 50 - 60 ft flight with recovery right beside pad
05-19-2005 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm Qubit - A perfect back yard flyer. Impossible to lose.
08-20-2005 Bob Harrington Qst MMX Apogee - NC Up 0-5 mph winds Qubit - Low and slow flight on a fun little paper rocket.
07-03-2006 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm Qubit -
07-03-2006 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm Scimitar -
07-03-2006 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm Qubit -
07-17-2007 Bob Harrington Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm -
06-23-2006 Mal McClenaghan Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm - Scimitar. My first MMX experience. Backyard launch with landing 2 metres from pad.
06-23-2006 Mal McClenaghan Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm - Scimitar. Nice flight, landed 2 metres from pad.
06-23-2006 Mal McClenaghan Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm - Stealth. Flies higher than the Scimitar. Cool paper plan.
06-23-2006 Mal McClenaghan Qst MMX None - Tumble Calm - Stealth. Nice flight. Landed maybe 2.5 metres from the pad.
   

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