(Contributed - by Scott Turnbull
- 12/14/06)
Brief:
This downsized homage to the classic Estes Astron Orbital Transport was done as
a kit bash of parts from FlisKits' USS Grissom kit. It's built around a 13mm
motor mount and retains the key feature of the parasitic glider that releases
when the booster puts on the brakes.

Modifications:
I've always liked the look of my vintage Astron Orbital Transport. While this
downsized kit bash isn't 100% dimensionally accurate, the family resemblance to
her big sister should be apparent.
Start by building up the large fins on the main tube. Much like the
original OT, the downsized wings are fashioned from several aligned pieces of
sheet balsa. The wings have different angles of leading edge, and the multiple
pieces allow the balsa grain to be parallel to the various edges. Each wing has
a major section extending out from the airframe, a smaller section running up
along the tube and a small rectangular section on the trailing edge that
finishes off the scramjet area.
There are two large tabs on each wing. Each side has a downfacing tab at
the tip and an upfacing tab at mid wing. I oversized these slightly relative to
a true downsized OT. This was done to improve stability and add strength to
what otherwise would be narrow tabs.
Under each wing is a scramjet assembly fashioned from two small tubes
encased in a sheet balsa box frame.


There is no engine clip. Friction and tape are used to retain the motor.
Yellow glue was used throughout to stiffen balsa and form fillets.
The balsa nosecone from the Grissom kit was recycled from another design
and had been cut down. Its original uncut shape would be a better match to the
vintage OT nosecone. I've used a blue Gnome nosecone in some photos to
demonstrate the proper shape. All flights were done with the stumpy balsa
nosecone. A bolt and nuts in the base of the nosecone provide nose weight. A
length of Kevlar®
thread connects the nosecone to the elastic shock cord. A streamer was
fashioned by cutting the edge off of the parachute from the Grissom kit.
My original OT Glider has always performed well. The downsized glider was
fashioned as closely as possible to the original. I had no delusions of
recreating the exact fluttering, circular flight in such a small scale. I found
it just too small and light to perform meaningful glide tests. The look of the
downsized glider was valued over the function. The glider is built like the
original with two balsa delta wings meeting at an angle under the glider body.
Control tabs are glued at an angle at each rear corner. These tabs are angled
to help keep the glider nose up and keep the glide path from slewing sideways.
A large tail fin also helps keep the glide stable.
To mount the glider, a short length of launch lug is mounted to the top
surface of the booster tube. Two bracing brackets are glued further back on the
booster airframe. This is in keeping with how the original Orbital Transport
retains its glider.
A hook must be fashioned on the bottom of the glider to fit into the launch
lug. In order to keep this a true kit bash, only materials from the Grissom kit
should be used for the glider hook. Fashion a small section of two ply balsa
plywood by gluing to sections of sheet balsa together with their grains running
perpendicular to each other. Once dry, shape a hook shape from the two ply
balsa. Glue the hook to the bottom of the glider and shape the jutting portion
to fit easily into the booster's glider retaining launch lug.
Construction:
The parts list for the Orbital Transport Downsize is simple enough. It uses a
small fraction of what the FlisKit Grissom parts bag contains. It uses a single
13mm body tube for the main airframe and several lengths of 5mm tube to fashion
the glider and scramjet tubes. Two suitable nose cones are in the Grissom kit.
Other than that, it's largely a matter of lots of fiddly bits of sheet balsa.
It helps to have a full scale Orbital Transport on hand for eyeballing
relative dimensions. Barring that, there are a set of OT plans available at
JimZ's site.
I used best judgment and gut instinct to make some changes on the fly. The
parts from the Grissom won't allow exact downsizing of all components. For
instance, the small tubes are too large for perfectly scaled scramjets but too
small for the shuttle body.

Finishing:
A sanding sponge with a parallelogram shape provided various edges for sanding
the nooks and crannies around the wing tabs. A blast or three of white spray
paint seals everything quickly.
There are lovely red decals provided with the USS Grissom. These can be cut
down and pieced together to approximate the red decals on the original Astron
Orbital Transport. I haven't taken that step as yet as I wanted to wait for a
flight test before committing the limited supply of decals.
I tried to increase my odds of recovering the rocket by attaching the glider so
that it wouldn't detach at apogee. I used a small piece of elastic to hold the
glider tightly to the booster. A shorted igniter and resulting burning igniter
tape caused a small pad fire that burned through that elastic and sooted up the
back of booster and glider. A quick re-tape was done and another igniter
installed.
All alone on the snowy field, I counted down and touched
off the modest A3-4T. Oh my, too high! An arrow straight boost to several
hundred feet caused me to lose the small white rocket in the afternoon sky. I
picked up the tracking smoke, heard the pop, and saw two pieces head in
different directions. I caught sight of them both again at about 50 feet up.
The shock cord had snapped. When the booster was found bellied into the snow,
the glider was not on board. Drat! The tape was still on the booster but one
end was loose. The must have peeled it off the glider. The nosecone and
streamer were easily found.
The Glider was not found that afternoon. I did retrieve it the next day.
While its flight was unseen, it managed to land a good 100 feet further away
than the nosecone and streamer drifted.
On that first day while mourning the potential loss of the little glider,
the shock cord was retied. A more modest 1/2A3-2T motor was loaded up. This
flight minus the missing glider was also arrow straight to at least 100 feet.
The ejection popped out the streamer and all was recovered intact.
A third flight on another 1/2A3-2T resulted in the motor kicking out the
back of the booster. The nosecone popped out but the streamer didn't. The
booster bellied into the snow without damage after a .
Recovery:
CON: That is one small glider. So small that I never saw it release, fly, or
land. Flying a white rocket on a snowy field might have something to do with
losing track of that little bit of balsa.
Summary:
What started as a mission to make a downsized display model of an old classic
ended up creating a well performing flier. I'll have to build another glider
and decide whether it's just too small to fly freely. It might be best to just
leave the shuttle bonded to the booster back.