
07-01-2012, 07:54 PM
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Roger Smith/JonRocket.com
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Oviedo, FL
Posts: 702
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by mycrofte
I got to launch my Daedalus yesterday but did an odd corkscrew I haven't seen before.
I have a diagram of what it did, if it makes any sense. The nose always stayed pointed toward an imaginary apogee but the body (aft end) twirled around. I can only guess it was a borderline stability problem. Or maybe the large twin fins acted like ailerons. The bottom of the rocket was always pointed inward like it was gravitationally locked, like the Moon.
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That's called "coning" or "pitch-roll coupling." It generally happens with long, thin rockets that are "over-stable." But, in your case, I think the cause is more complicated.
A more-thorough description of the phenomenon is at: http://www.info-central.org/?article=124
-- Roger
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