Nice flight but risky to possible aircraft in the area to launch into a low cloud....unfortunately where I launch , pilots seem to ignore the Notams and fly right over the launch area all the time..not worth taking a chance launching into clouds.
I used to print pilot's maps. Places to not fly over, routinely ignored: mushroom farms, Studs, mental hospitals, large country estates. Ignored for different reasons, but normal behaviour.
@@metermatch NAR HP safety code rule 9: Flight Safety. I will not launch my rocket at targets, into clouds, near airplanes,... No, you can't just HAVE AT IT and insurance doesn't cover flagrant violations of the code either. I believe the rule of thumb is no more than 50% cloud cover in the space you are launching into.
The first man made object to go into space.
It was a missile, not a rocket ship.
Carried on flying until it got to London.
Most V-2s were fired at Antwerp, oddly enough.
Nice flight but risky to possible aircraft in the area to launch into a low cloud....unfortunately where I launch , pilots seem to ignore the Notams and fly right over the launch area all the time..not worth taking a chance launching into clouds.
IFR pilot checking in. You are right.
I used to print pilot's maps. Places to not fly over, routinely ignored: mushroom farms, Studs, mental hospitals, large country estates.
Ignored for different reasons, but normal behaviour.
>pilots seem to ignore the Notams. Pilots should not ignore the Notams. At one point it becomes their responsibility, not ours.
Ok. I love the purple lightsaber color of this rocket! Too bad overcast sky cut the visibility. Keep posting .., I will keep watching!
Thumbs up for the cluster puck.
I thought flying into clouds was a big NO-NO?
As long as the airspace is clear and the rocket is angled down range it is ok.
You are required to get FAA clearance in the area to a certain altitude. And then have-at-it!
@@metermatch NAR HP safety code rule 9: Flight Safety. I will not launch my rocket at targets, into clouds, near airplanes,... No, you can't just HAVE AT IT and insurance doesn't cover flagrant violations of the code either.
I believe the rule of thumb is no more than 50% cloud cover in the space you are launching into.
Party pooper
@@donochetti2177 I will wear that comment with a badge of honour!
So...was it ever seen again?
dank
Was it ever seen again?
Went u=only about 7000' Not all parachutes opened and it landed hard.
It hits London
nicely done for something that flys like a brick
Your comment makes no sense lol
@@KingLordLele You truly haven't a clue the science or the history of the V2, do you?
Niiiiice
Imagine it dissapears on the clouds and
The ppl didnt know that the rocket is targeting them.
1:00 Disappeared in less than 10 seconds, while fake rockets like Saturns, Spacex, etc. Take 10+ second just to clear their 100 meter launch towers😊
Wooooow
👋👋👋👋👋👋
London, beware
Into low clouds?
violates NAR safety code doesn’t it?
@@calebbautista7243 oh well
@@calebbautista7243 doesn’t matter. it happened and no one died.
@@calebbautista7243 shut up
Purple Haze!
People will think is it ICBM launch?
😮😮😮
Where did it come down at?
London be like 😮
I am the only modern comment
Not anymore
@@readysetreact1345 *a new challenger is approaching*
@@cxn8 another challenger is approaching
nop
Boom boom
What does a rocket go to go to the clouds
Spin stabilized ?