Centuri Akela Boy Scout Rocket Kit Experiences
I wanted to conduct a quick survey to see how many folks here had their early rocketry experiences through the Centuri kit made specifically for the Scouts in the early 1970s, the Akela.
I recall an earlier discussion about this kit by someone who I think was trying to clone it, but I wanted to see how widespread the exposure to this kit might have been. So.....if you had your first exposure to rocketry by way of this kit or were influenced to get into rocketry because of it, please provide a brief response here to that effect (just a sentence or two is sufficient). Earl |
Centuri Akela-1
I remember seeing them on display in the Cub/Boy Scout section of a local department store.
I bought a box of 8 and built them all with different fin configurations. :cool: ...Which, of course, was the whole point of that design. :o :rolleyes: ;) :D Doug Holverson once posted somewhere (maybe here?) a question to the effect of, "Wasn't the Akela-1 just a minimum diameter version of the Centuri Vector-V?" I think my reaction was, " :confused: " :) Cheers, |
I bought one at J.C. Penny's and built it, but was not allowed to buy any motors. The body tube eventually got damaged, but I kept the nose cone and fins. In a way it was my first rocket, but it never flew.
A few years later I finally convinced my parents to let me get into rocketry, thanks to my cousins and a trip to their farm to launch some rockets. They had a non-ejection with a DRM and gave me the crashed rocket and an old catalog. I repaired it and ordered a Challenger-1 starter kit and a pack of motors for the DRM. The rest is history. BTW, I eventually bought a couple more Akela-1 kits and still have all the nose cones and a few fins. That's how I know the current Estes Viking fins are slightly different from the classic Akela-1, but nobody seems to believe me. :p |
I was at the 1977 National Scout Jamboree walking around and saw the Space Exploration Merit Badge class launch a
bunch of rockets. I have no idea what they were launching, but it was so cool I had to get one when I got back from the Jamboree. I got y parents to buy me the Challenger-1 launch set and was off and running. I enjoyed rockets for a really long time after that. |
I was already a rocketeer when the Akela set came out.
The kit, bulk pack, and motor packs were carried by a men's clothing store in the next town that supplied uniforms and gear to scouts. I remember helping supply my 6th grade class with Akelas. I don't remember if we got around to launching them. |
NOT identical fin shapes!
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I never had an Akela-1, but I wanted one. (I wanted to join the scouts, too, but by the time I came along my parents were older and didn't have the energy--my five older siblings were all scouts, though). If, speaking hypothetically, Akela-1 kits were produced again, I would buy some; and yes, tbzep is right about the differences between the Estes Viking and the Centuri Viking (which the Akela-1 is, just in a different [Scout colors] livery).
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We won't even get into the nose cone differences. :chuckle: |
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There's that, plus the tip has a larger radius than the Estes version. |
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