#1
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Enerjet Brochure and Shock Cord Fastener
Attached are scans of a four page Enerjet brochure covering the then new Enerjet line. I picked this up last summer and it is a brochure that I personally had never seen before. Thought that the Enerjet fans here would like to see it.
It is an 11 x 17 sheet folded in half providing for four pages. On the cover page is Larry Brown holding a Pteradactyl glider. The other person at the launch rack I do not know. On page two (inside left page as it is opened) shows a fairly young Grant Boyd with an Aerodart on an LIA-77 launcher. I understand that Grant passed away in May, 2018 from Parkinson's Disease in Arizona. I never met Grant, but it seems he was one of the key personnel that kept Centuri going through the mid-to latter 70s. He was R&D Director at Centuri from what I recall. I always enjoyed his material in the Rocket Times newsletters that Centuri published back in those days. The other pages show some interesting photos of Enerjet product. The final item is a scan of an Enerjet shock cord fastener. For those who were accustomed to the standard Centuri fastener from the very early 70s, it is interesting to see how much larger the Enerjet version is. Strangely, Enerjet kits also used 1/8" elastic shock cord like their smaller Centuri siblings. One would think with a fastener this big, they would have jumped up to 3/16", if not 1/4" material. From the Enerjet kits I have, not so. Earl
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Earl L. Cagle, Jr. NAR# 29523 TRA# 962 SAM# 73 Owner/Producer Point 39 Productions Rocket-Brained Since 1970 |
#2
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Thank-you, Earl. I have never seen this brochure before either. Back in those days I very much preferred the flat-lying, streamlined Centuri shock cord fastener to the Estes tri-fold. These days I prefer variations of the LOC-style mount, but I would again use the Centuri shock cord mount in my model rockets if it was available.
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-Wolfram v. Kiparski NAR 28643 - TRA 15520 MTMA Section #606 President |
#3
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I have not seen that brochure either and I thought I had previously seen all the Enerjet docs.
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When in doubt, WHACK the GAS and DITCH the brake !!! Yes, there is such a thing as NORMAL, if you have to ask what is "NORMAL" , you probably aren't ! Failure may not be an OPTION, but it is ALWAYS a POSSIBILITY. ALL systems are GO for MAYHEM, CHAOS, and HAVOC ! |
#4
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Earl,
Thanks for sharing. Fun to look at old marketing material and pictures — especially seeing something like this for the first time.
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Lee Reep NAR 55948 Projects: Semroc Saturn 1B, Ken Foss Designs Mini Satellite Interceptor In the Paint Shop: Nothing! Too cold! Launch-Ready: Farside-X, Maxi Honest John, Super Scamp |
#5
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Thanks for sharing the downloads!
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I wonder how it slipped by us all these YORF years?
Thanks, Earl!
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I love sanding. |
#7
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Wonder what year it was from ?
Enerjet engines were first available in 1971. The first and only catalog of Enerjet kits was 1972 although the products were available through at least 1976 and possibly early 1977 through Centuri. A local hobby shop in my area had a huge stock of boxed Enerjet engines available through the 80's but they were always expensive for the time. 8 bucks for an F engine in 1987 was considered very costly.
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When in doubt, WHACK the GAS and DITCH the brake !!! Yes, there is such a thing as NORMAL, if you have to ask what is "NORMAL" , you probably aren't ! Failure may not be an OPTION, but it is ALWAYS a POSSIBILITY. ALL systems are GO for MAYHEM, CHAOS, and HAVOC ! |
#8
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Quote:
Best I can tell, this must be from around the late summer or early fall of '72. At the top of page two of the brochure, the text makes reference to "At this year's internationals....". Though the word 'internationals' is a bit of a misnomer in this context, I think they are referring to NARAM (14, I believe), which that year had been held in Seattle. There, Enerjets were given a fairly big run of demonstration flights, several of which were record attempts (see Enerjet News #3 from Sept 1972 here: http://www.spacemodeling.org/jimz/ejn03.htm). Pretty sure that is the event being referenced in this particular Enerjet brochure. So yeah, I think late summer or so of 1972 would be a pretty good guess. Anyone here have any first hand (or even second hand) information about working with or around Grant Boyd? I've heard a number of anecdotal information or stories about other Centuri staffers over the years, but I don't think I've ever heard any about Grant really, save for a quick story from a former Centuri motor plant staffer who went out once with Grant to test fire an Enerjet cluster rocket outside Phoenix. That's about it. Any other stories from or about Grant would be appreciated. Earl
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Earl L. Cagle, Jr. NAR# 29523 TRA# 962 SAM# 73 Owner/Producer Point 39 Productions Rocket-Brained Since 1970 |
#9
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Very interesting!
This seems to be a "dealer" brochure; it really plays up the marketing and packaging of the line. FWIW: The one Enerjet product I bought was a Nike Ram. I bought it direct; it was probably the most expensive model I'd bought at the time. I had the cost of the model, but luckily found a dollar bill which helped with the shipping! It came in a plastic bag, not that magnificent box. Perhaps the direct sales used cheaper packaging? I only got one copy, likely the first, of the "monthly" newsletter.
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NAR #27085 - Oregon Rocketry - SAM |
#10
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Unfortunately, Grant Boyd passed away in May 2018. I didn't get a chance to work with him, but he left behind a rich treasure of "Life at Centuri" in the Estes files that I went through when I worked there.
Matt |
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