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Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC) 2013-2014 September 2013 Kick-off Meeting

TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry. Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC) 2013-2014 September 2013 Kick-off Meeting. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry. Video on line at http://aiaaocrocketry.org/AIAAOCRocketryDocs/TARC2013/TARC_TeamAmericaRocketryChallenge.wmv. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry.

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Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC) 2013-2014 September 2013 Kick-off Meeting

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  1. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Team America Rocketry Challenge(TARC)2013-2014September 2013 Kick-off Meeting

  2. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Video on line at http://aiaaocrocketry.org/AIAAOCRocketryDocs/TARC2013/TARC_TeamAmericaRocketryChallenge.wmv

  3. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Team America Rocketry Challenge “Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC) provides 7th through 12th grade students a realistic experience in designing a flying aerospace vehicle that meets a specified set of mission and performance requirements. Students work together in teams the same way aerospace engineers do”

  4. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry What is TARC • Team America Rocketry Challenge • International Rocketry Contest • Up to 1000 teams • 7th through 12th graders • Compete for scholarships and a trip to an Air Show in Europe • Each year a challenge is issued • Maximum weight • Certain altitude • Duration of flight • Payload • Your team designs, builds, and flies your design to meet the challenge • Top 100 teams compete in finals • Top 20 teams go on to compete in NASA Student Launch Initiative

  5. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry 2013 – 2014 Challenge • Attain an altitude of exactly 825 ft • Flight duration must be 48 – 50 seconds • Must carry a payload of two raw hen’s eggs & return undamaged • Eggs can be flown in any orientation (vertical/horizontal) • Each egg must weigh 57 – 63 grams • Rocket must stay tethered together • Recovery of the rocket must be two parachutes of equal size • Rocket may be any size but must weigh less than 650 • Powered by “F” or lower motor(s) listed in approved motors • Team members (not adults) do the work • There are more rules – see the Team Handbook – the final authority

  6. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry 2013 – 2014 Scoring Final score is the average of the two best scores Scores must be received by at the offices of AIA by 3/31/2014 One point will be deducted for teams that submit at least one score before 3/2/2014 (that is good – lower scores are better) • Similar to golf – the lower the score the better • Target altitude is 825 ft • Each foot your altitude is different costs 1 point • Accuracy is down to 1 foot measured by an on-board altimeter • Target time window is 48 to 50 seconds from liftoff until the rocket touches down (or can no longer be seen) • In the window costs 0 points • Each second your time is different costs 4 points • Time is measured to .01 seconds by observers on the ground • Up to three Qualification Flights must be made between 9/2/2013 and 3/31/2014 – you MUST make two

  7. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Previous TARC Years

  8. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Skill: Teamwork

  9. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Communications… I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I’m not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant

  10. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Planning

  11. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry How are you going to do this? • Assemble a team • Read and understand the rules in the handbook • Read and understand the NAR Safety Rules • Meet often as a team to discuss and execute • Ask yourselves: What do we need to know? • Make a plan including timetable and budget • Research the topics from what we need to know • Design your rocket using a CAD program • Simulate your rocket’s flight & select your approved motor • Fine tune the design and the motor selection • Order parts and motors • Build your rocket • Test Fly your rocket and compare against simulation • Modify your design and test fly again (iterative) • Declare qualification flights and fly your rocket

  12. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry NAR Safety Code Highlights • Use only lightweight, non metal parts for the nose, body, and fins • Use only certified and approved commercially made motors • Use an electrical launch system with safety interlock for the ignition switch • Use a launch rod, tower or rail pointed to within 30 degrees of vertical • Don’t launch at targets, into clouds, or near airplanes • Assure adequate space (“F” motors require a minimum of 1000 ft across launch site • You must use a recovery system (parachute(s) or streamer • Read the full Model Rocket Safety Code in the Handbook

  13. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry • Teams must be 3 – 10 members • All members must be in 7th through 12th grades • You need a lot of different skills – not just “rocket scientists” • Members that like to lead and manage a team • Technical members to help design • Mechanically oriented members to help build • Members familiar with the computer • Members that like to track budgets and fundraise • One team member must be the Program Manager Assemble a team • Each team member must make a significant contribution to the design, building and/or launching • Team members can be added or dropped until the first qualification flight

  14. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry • Identify a project manager to be responsible for the team • Each team member should read and understand the contest and safety rules in the Handbook • Identify what you need to know and needed areas of expertise • Establish a schedule with dates and stick to it • Estimate your costs and your fundraising needs and methods Early Team Tasks

  15. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry • Schedule: Use Microsoft Office “Excel” or Open Office “Calc” to show tasks and time – then stick to your schedule! Schedule and Budget Budget: Use the same tool to get an estimate of what you will spend on this project – then you know how much money you will need to raise

  16. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Research areas of expertise • You might want to have each member research a different area and report to the team to share their knowledge • Areas of expertise might include • Payload (protect the eggs) • Recovery (deliver eggs from altitude) • Airframe design, fins, nose cone • Rocksim CAD Design • Motors and igniters • Effects of weather on the rocket • Collect and analyze launch data • Construction and finish • Budget and fundraising

  17. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Technology leads share research

  18. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Discuss design concepts Use the research from team technology leads to begin your design You might want one to start out with one design, or want to test concepts with several designs You might want one joint design, or one from each of several team members

  19. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Evaluate potential designs Make use of your technology experts • Long or short body • Shape of nose cone • Shape of fins • Placement of egg payload • Protection of egg payload • Shape of parachute • Black Powder or APCP motor • Materials to use • The list goes on and on • The team needs to make educated decisions

  20. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Determine how to protect your payload

  21. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Test your Payload

  22. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Design and Simulate with Rocksim

  23. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry RockSim – Design & Motor Selection

  24. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry RockSim - Simulation

  25. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Order and receive parts and motors

  26. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Build your design(s)Construction is as important as design for consistency of flights

  27. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry • Very restrictive - NOT in your back yard, park, or school yard • State of California requires the landowners permission, the local fire authority’s permission, and often a permit ($300 - $1,000 per day) • Rockets above 500g and with larger motors have more restrictions in California Where can you launch? • Best to launch at organized launches • (Distances are from the city of Orange) • R.O.C. in Lucerne Dry Lake past Apple Valley (about 100 miles) • D.A.R.T. at Fiesta Island near San Diego (about 90 miles) • S.C.R.A. at Santa Fe Dam Recreation Area (about 35 miles) – limit is 500g rockets and “C” motors in spring • There are more sites even further away – we will use those if needed

  28. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Test and Tune Your Design

  29. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry The Qualification Flight • The Qualification Flights are your ticket to the finals • You can make up to 3, your final score is the average of the best 2 • There is no single qualification event – you can make a qualification flight at any time there is an independent senior NAR member present and an adult to observe at a launch • You declare your Qualification Flight BEFORE the launch • The NAR observer will inspect your rocket before flight • For safety – should it be stable and is it built well? • For rule compliance – two eggs, motor size, correct altimeter, correct parachutes

  30. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry The Qualification Flight Cont’d • The NAR observer will watch and time your flight • The NAR observer will inspect your rocket after flight • The observer will record your altitude and times • The observer will inspect your eggs for damage • The observer will inspect your rocket for serious damage – it must be able to fly again • Send your scores in to TARC/AIA to be received by 11:59PM EST on 3/31/2014

  31. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Qualify!

  32. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Video on line at http://aiaaocrocketry.org/AIAAOCRocketryDocs/TARC2013/ASAT_TARC2010-W-Beeps.wmv

  33. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Attend Finals near Washington D.C.

  34. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Top 20 teams invited to SLI • NASA Student Launch Initiative program by invitation only • Learning opportunity working with NASA including: Design, construction, scheduling, purchasing, finance, logistics, press, educational engagement, web site development, technical documentation, scientific payload design, testing for a reusable lanchvehiclescientific payload • Organized similar to NASA project life cycle Write Proposal, Preliminary, Critical, and Flight Readiness Reviews and present via WebEx to engineers at Marshall Space Flight Center, Tour Marshall Space Flight Center, Exhibit at Rocket Fair, Launch rocket in Huntsville, Alabama

  35. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry How can AIAA OC Section help? • Teams must be attached to a non-profit organization with a youth program such as AIAA, a school, scout troop, 4H • Each organization can have up to 5 teams of 3 to 10 members each • If your school, 4H, scout troop or other youth program will not let you form a team attached to them, AIAA can have 5 teams or help find other professional organizations to help • For any team • We will provide mentoring as needed • We will provide a place to meet with PCs with Rocksim • We will provide construction materials (glue, fin jigs etc.) • We will have many launch outings to test and fine-tune • We will help you put together a field box with essential tools and support materials

  36. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Budget • Fundraising • Sales: Garage, Sees Candy, Mary Kaye Cosmetics • Corporate Sponsors: Industry, Aerospace, Local Businesses • Do chores, beg parents to help (it’s your responsibility to raise money, not theirs) • Teams are responsible for their own expenses • Materials to build one rocket: $25 - $50 (2 or more per design) • Motors to launch: $6 - $19 each (10 – 30 launches total) • Small “E” Black Powder Single Use: $6.00 • Estes or Aerotech APCP “E” Single Use: $15 - $18 • Estes or Aerotech APCP “F” Single Use: $18 • Aerotech or Cesaroni APCP “E” Reloads: $9 - $15 + One Casing • Aerotech or Cesaroni APCP “F” Reloads: $15 - $19 + One Casing • Transportation to the launches (gas and vehicle) • WHEN you make the finals • Air Fare to Washington DC - $400/person • Hotel ($89/room/night – share rooms) • Meals ($5-$10/meal)

  37. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Schedule 2013 • 9/2 – 12/31: Sign up • September – AIAA OC Section TARC 2013 kick-off • Sept – Dec: Design, build, and test – the earlier the better 2014 • Jan – 3/31: Refine design and continue to test • 3/2 – Should have completed first qualification flight • 3/31 – Must have completed all qualification flights • 3/31 – Qualification flight forms RECEIVED at AIA • 4/4 – top 100 teams announced • 5/10 – Final Fly-offs near Washington DC More Information http://rocketcontest.org http://AIAAOCRocketry.org http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NARTARC http://www.nar.org

  38. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry How to proceed from here Team completes the “TARC 2014 Application Packet” Each team member completes the “Parent/Guardian Consent & Release Form”

  39. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry • New teams might want to build and fly 2.6” rocket kit as a group, or have each member build and fly a smaller kit to get some experience before designing. • Start as soon as possible with your design – time passes very fast and school must come first. • Select your motor early from RockSim and validate with test flights • Buy all the motors you need at one time with the same lot number • There can be a long lead time on motors starting December as 1000 teams buy 20 similar motors each from just a few manufacturers • Prepare for bad weather and cancelled launches January through March A Few General Tips Our Favorite Launch Site – Lucerne Dry Lake – isn’t always Dry

  40. TARC 2013-2014 AIAA OC Rocketry Thank you Questions?

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