Thank you for your video! Very informative and lots of tips! In the instructions, I thought the step after tying the shock cord to the cone was stuffing paper in. But that didn't make a lick of sense! So glad I watched your video! Great job!
Great build video Dave!!! The Viking seems to be the ultimate in versatile design! Great photos at the end. I’m sure your students had a ball with the Viking!!!!
Great video I love watching your builds. I just started back into Rocketry with my grandson. I wish I'd watched your video before the build because I accidentally ended up gluing the engine spacer tube inside the body tube. I told my grandson to push it into the tube only up to the mark & I was too concerned with getting the engine block ring set back into the proper space . Not realizing I was supposed to pull the yellow tube out. The glue had fully set up, I had a hell of a time getting out. I crumpled the body tube some trying to pull it out with needle nose pliers. Had I watched the whole video it might of saved me some unnecessary aggravation.
@@REAR_rockets As a child in the '60s, it was my source of Gumby and many other cartoons. The set was what the inside of a rocket must have looked like, complete with robot. I was 7 for Apollo 11. No robot.
Another Dave Thomas is Doug McKenzie, played by Dave Thomas, so take off eh. Don't watch the link if you're likely to feel insulted by a conversation about back bacon or long johns ruclips.net/video/0pPRaD6TKLc/видео.html Never search the song ruclips.net/video/1DTwLqR071M/видео.html Inside Toronto at the time.
Dr dave, on a 2 stage model that uses friction mounting, and staging where you tape the motors together, will a 1mm gap still work for a rocket like that? The gap is no bigger than the thickness of a penny.
Thank you for your video! Very informative and lots of tips! In the instructions, I thought the step after tying the shock cord to the cone was stuffing paper in. But that didn't make a lick of sense! So glad I watched your video! Great job!
Great build video Dave!!! The Viking seems to be the ultimate in versatile design! Great photos at the end. I’m sure your students had a ball with the Viking!!!!
Great video I love watching your builds. I just started back into Rocketry with my grandson. I wish I'd watched your video before the build because I accidentally ended up gluing the engine spacer tube inside the body tube. I told my grandson to push it into the tube only up to the mark & I was too concerned with getting the engine block ring set back into the proper space . Not realizing I was supposed to pull the yellow tube out. The glue had fully set up, I had a hell of a time getting out. I crumpled the body tube some trying to pull it out with needle nose pliers. Had I watched the whole video it might of saved me some unnecessary aggravation.
Thanks your instructions made It so much easier
I’m glad that you found it useful.
In the '60s a guy hosted a kids morning show in Buffalo. Rocketship 7. His name, Dave Thomas.
Cool! I was a small child in the '60s though.
@@REAR_rockets As a child in the '60s, it was my source of Gumby and many other cartoons. The set was what the inside of a rocket must have looked like, complete with robot. I was 7 for Apollo 11. No robot.
Another Dave Thomas is Doug McKenzie, played by Dave Thomas, so take off eh. Don't watch the link if you're likely to feel insulted by a conversation about back bacon or long johns ruclips.net/video/0pPRaD6TKLc/видео.html
Never search the song ruclips.net/video/1DTwLqR071M/видео.html Inside Toronto at the time.
Dr dave, on a 2 stage model that uses friction mounting, and staging where you tape the motors together, will a 1mm gap still work for a rocket like that? The gap is no bigger than the thickness of a penny.
@@gillandro2 it shouldn’t be a problem.
@@REAR_rockets ty doc