SANDMAN
Dennis "Doctor DynaSoar" McClain-Furmanski's
Descon-14 Entry

Leftest: Three versions, original left most
Midleft: Sandman with nosecone and 2nd stage
Top center: Nose cone
Bottom center: first 3-to1 payload transition
Right: Business end
The Sandman is the first of a series of cluster designs
intended to test the scaling up of an airframe while only scaling up to higher
power building techniques as testing proves necessary. Essentially, it is
building for performance while combating overbuilding. Materials are all
"model rocket" quality, light paper tubes, medium weight balsa or
basswood, and wood glue.
The core of the design is 3 clustered 24mm tubes. This provides 2/3 of the
frontal as a single tube containing the motor tubes. To maintain
the benefit in lower drag, different configurations of three-to-one tube
complex curved transitions have been sculpted, as has a nose cone for testing
without payload sections.
The airframe is three 24mm tubes glued together along their 30 to 34"
length. Except for motor and recovery equipment areas, the tubes have been
drilled along their contact lines so the glue can "rivet" through
these. Three fillets the full length of the tube offer a great deal of strength
to the airframe. (Interesting aside: the first model was left on top a hot car
roof during a launch. An hour later it had a 10 degree curve along the body.
This remained the next day after it had cooled. I thought it was ruined. A week
later, with no effort applied at all it was perfectly straight again, and
eventually flew beautifully. This leads one to wonder how often the old LPR
technique of straightening misaligned fins by heating the glue fillets over a
light bulb resulted eventually became misaligned again.)
Engine mounting is Estes E size (3.75") engine hooks topped with a
20/50 centering ring as an engine block. Hook ends are to the inside of the
cluster and a small slice of 24mm tube is glued over the top of the hook as an
anchor. Shock cord is doubled loop ¼" elastic mounted 4 inches inside
one of the tubes. The other tubes contain chutes and/or streamers.
The fins, balsa or basswood, are sanded to a sharp edge on the root and
glued between two tubes. This increases the surface area of the fin contacting
body tube, increasing adhesion. Fillets are wood glue. The first version
required repeated puncturing and filling in of bubbles in the fillets due to
the large amount of glue used, especially on the fillets between tubes. This
was prevented on the others by doing the fillets in many layers. Launch lugs
are glued against one fin root, and with the addition of a piece of dowel
between the tubes as a stand off, near the top of the body.
Finishing is first, spray lacquer sanding sealer, on everything. Fins are
sanded and a second coat is added and sanded. Then primer, followed by white
satin finish, covered with black gloss (except booster, which is flat black
"high heat" stove paint and fluorescent orange). The payload sections
are painted (and named) gray, to match the Sandman costumes in "Logan's
Run", blue red and white of the Russian flag (named "Mechtayu",
meaning to dream) and the traditional four colors of the four races from Native
American history (named "Dreamcatcher").
First flight of the Sandman was with the nose cone instead of payload
section, on three C5-3's in 18 to 24mm adapters. The flight was flawless and
higher than expected. At ejection, the parachute failed to open. However, the
large size but light weight allowed the rocket to float slowly down
horizontally, and it suffered no damage. The second flight was on three E9-6's.
Due to wind, and the testing with several rockets previous to the flight, it
was launched upwind. Again the flight was flawless, but again the chute didn't
open, however it did display the same gentle horizontal descent. Due to the
trajectory, it landed in an inaccessible swamp. The lesson learned is, 24mm is
hard on plastic chutes. Unless there's a significant payload, streamers may be
enough for this rocket; weight with payload section before loading engines is
from 6 to 7 ounces. A streamer will definitely be used on the two stage test,
when six E9 engines will push a total of 171 n/s. After these are fully tested
repeated and examined for stress damage, the next versions will be 29mm with
enough engine space for the longest available 29mm motors. Both wood glue and
epoxy versions will be built for comparison testing.