He he, most of the ramjet projects I´ve seen so far must have had a budget roof at $30...I have only set aside about $3000 for the project (...)
Ducted Ramjet that is meant to fly.
Moderator: Mike Everman
termal test Cork
Really? $ 30 i wish i could make anything that cheap.
I bought 4 types of cork
Cork 1: Pieces of cork glued together
Cork 2: Large almost continuous pieces of cork
Cork 3: Pressed pieses of cork
Cork 4: Rough large pieces of cork glued together
Testing methodology: å butane torch burning the surface while blowing high pressure air at the sample.
Results
Cork 1: the glue used was highly flammable it burned as if it had been soaked in gasoline. - failure
Cork 2: The piece separated into thin layers and the pressurized air blew some of them off. - failure
Cork 3: This worked well, i kept the flame on for over 3 minutes and after brushing off the foamy ash that formed on the surface it looked almost like new apart from a slightly darker color. - success
Cork 4: this blew apart before i even got the torch trained on it - failure
Cork 3 schould work now i have to test it in a pressurized combustion environment
I bought 4 types of cork
Cork 1: Pieces of cork glued together
Cork 2: Large almost continuous pieces of cork
Cork 3: Pressed pieses of cork
Cork 4: Rough large pieces of cork glued together
Testing methodology: å butane torch burning the surface while blowing high pressure air at the sample.
Results
Cork 1: the glue used was highly flammable it burned as if it had been soaked in gasoline. - failure
Cork 2: The piece separated into thin layers and the pressurized air blew some of them off. - failure
Cork 3: This worked well, i kept the flame on for over 3 minutes and after brushing off the foamy ash that formed on the surface it looked almost like new apart from a slightly darker color. - success
Cork 4: this blew apart before i even got the torch trained on it - failure
Cork 3 schould work now i have to test it in a pressurized combustion environment
- Attachments
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- Cork 1
- cork1.JPG (4.17 KiB) Viewed 19799 times
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- Cork 2
- Cork2.JPG (2.91 KiB) Viewed 19798 times
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- Cork3
- Cork3.JPG (4.83 KiB) Viewed 19801 times
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- Cork 4
- cork4.JPG (14.22 KiB) Viewed 19803 times
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- Burnt cork tile
- burntcorktile.JPG (13.11 KiB) Viewed 19800 times
Cork!
Kent,
Udda man! This thread may have actually solved a construction dilemma that I had -- I am installing a ceiling that is very thin and which needs to be insulated w/ foam. Foam needs a fire-retardant covering. Most people use wall-board, which I detest. Cork may just be the thing!
Not exactly a ram-jet, but ...
At any rate, thanks for helping my little project fly.
Udda man! This thread may have actually solved a construction dilemma that I had -- I am installing a ceiling that is very thin and which needs to be insulated w/ foam. Foam needs a fire-retardant covering. Most people use wall-board, which I detest. Cork may just be the thing!
Not exactly a ram-jet, but ...
At any rate, thanks for helping my little project fly.
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Oak and a few other woods will form a type of carbon coating when exposed to intense heat on one side, and this coating prevents further burning. I know it flakes off like graphite though, so wouldn't be a permanent fix but wood is cheap and easy to rebuild with!
Try slathering it with phenolic resin, the stuff is literally epoxy that can withstand high heat for short times. Once again 1 time use but coating each wooden piece with it should extend run times a bit.......
You can buy the resin from most pyrotechnic suppliers
http://www.plenco.com/phenolicresins.html
Try slathering it with phenolic resin, the stuff is literally epoxy that can withstand high heat for short times. Once again 1 time use but coating each wooden piece with it should extend run times a bit.......
You can buy the resin from most pyrotechnic suppliers
http://www.plenco.com/phenolicresins.html
Sailing Student- How do I know if my life jacket is tight enough?
Me- Can you breathe?
Sailing Student- Yes
Me- Then its too loose!
Me- Can you breathe?
Sailing Student- Yes
Me- Then its too loose!
Cork doesnt like pressure and oxidant
pezman
The cork schould work for your construction, no problem, just make sure you get pressed cork not glued.
Zippot
Wood could work but phenolic resin seams to be a possible solution for my filament winding dilemma, it only needs to work for 3-5 minutes and if i understand correctly, these resins can easily handle that.
but it seams like its nasty stuff to work with, i will see if i can find a company that has experience working with this type of resin, so i don't kill myself by mixing chemicals i have no clue about
The cork didn't survive pressurized combustion next to oxidant, it burned up together with the fuel.
Back to the drawing board
The cork schould work for your construction, no problem, just make sure you get pressed cork not glued.
Zippot
Wood could work but phenolic resin seams to be a possible solution for my filament winding dilemma, it only needs to work for 3-5 minutes and if i understand correctly, these resins can easily handle that.
but it seams like its nasty stuff to work with, i will see if i can find a company that has experience working with this type of resin, so i don't kill myself by mixing chemicals i have no clue about
The cork didn't survive pressurized combustion next to oxidant, it burned up together with the fuel.
Back to the drawing board
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Phenolic is kinda like Vinyl Ester resin, not so much regular epoxy. Small bit of hardener for big vat of resin, and the hardener is...wear gloves
But some companies made 50/50 Phenolics, I have seen them just haven't tried them.
The stuff [to the best of my memory] is ABLATIVE, so it flakes off in tiny tiny amounts when exposed to extreme heat as opposed to just melting. Retains much of its strength and shape for longer periods, I use it to make nozzles for my rockets!!
But some companies made 50/50 Phenolics, I have seen them just haven't tried them.
The stuff [to the best of my memory] is ABLATIVE, so it flakes off in tiny tiny amounts when exposed to extreme heat as opposed to just melting. Retains much of its strength and shape for longer periods, I use it to make nozzles for my rockets!!
Sailing Student- How do I know if my life jacket is tight enough?
Me- Can you breathe?
Sailing Student- Yes
Me- Then its too loose!
Me- Can you breathe?
Sailing Student- Yes
Me- Then its too loose!
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No phenolic resin
Phenolic resin, as i have learned, is dangerous stuff and difficult to manufacture so i have decided to stay clear of it.
I will go back to trying to manufacture with alumina, i have talked to a professor at the university that knows about these things and he has given me a recipe for manufacturing the body tube.
The key it seams is to cure the alumina slowly 4-5 days at least, this relieves internal tension. He described the process used by companies that manufactures alumina pipes.
I need to manufacture the curing oven, (my budget will probably go bust after manufacturing only the body tube) but i want this .... to work. I will have to save up some more money to continue the project later if i run out of money.
Anyway this is what i will have to do, inside an oven that is stable at 600C i will have to build a rotating steel tube with one end open.
It will have to spin fast and the molten alumina is poured directly into the spinning pipe. this then has to stay heated and spinning for 18-20 hours before i gradually cool it down to under 100C over several days.
So i have to build or buy temperature control, build the owen as well as the mechanics to spin the tube.
The problem is of course that i don't know how to do this but a couple of grad students that i met while talking to the professor have agreed to help me out.
I guess this project will run until the money runs out, then i will have to re-budget before continuing.
One day i will make this fly!
I will go back to trying to manufacture with alumina, i have talked to a professor at the university that knows about these things and he has given me a recipe for manufacturing the body tube.
The key it seams is to cure the alumina slowly 4-5 days at least, this relieves internal tension. He described the process used by companies that manufactures alumina pipes.
I need to manufacture the curing oven, (my budget will probably go bust after manufacturing only the body tube) but i want this .... to work. I will have to save up some more money to continue the project later if i run out of money.
Anyway this is what i will have to do, inside an oven that is stable at 600C i will have to build a rotating steel tube with one end open.
It will have to spin fast and the molten alumina is poured directly into the spinning pipe. this then has to stay heated and spinning for 18-20 hours before i gradually cool it down to under 100C over several days.
So i have to build or buy temperature control, build the owen as well as the mechanics to spin the tube.
The problem is of course that i don't know how to do this but a couple of grad students that i met while talking to the professor have agreed to help me out.
I guess this project will run until the money runs out, then i will have to re-budget before continuing.
One day i will make this fly!
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graphite
Most higher power rocket motors use graphite as the nozzle. It isn't as brittle if held under compression and the thermal properties are just great! If a graphite nozzle gets dropped, its going to chip/crack/shatter, but if handled carefully, it would be fine.
-Aaron
-Aaron
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The rockets nozzles are machined from a big chunk of graphite...thick stuff though still light weight.
I cant find the link but there is a spreadable clay insulator that protects from heat, spreads like butter. Might come in handy......
I cant find the link but there is a spreadable clay insulator that protects from heat, spreads like butter. Might come in handy......
Sailing Student- How do I know if my life jacket is tight enough?
Me- Can you breathe?
Sailing Student- Yes
Me- Then its too loose!
Me- Can you breathe?
Sailing Student- Yes
Me- Then its too loose!
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Re: Cutting alumina
Have you tried a liquid cooled diamond saw like used in a lapidary shop?
I can cut most things with mine with some practice.
Just a thought.
I can cut most things with mine with some practice.
Just a thought.
In the process of moving, from the glorified phone booth we had to the house we have.
No real time to work on jets, more space, no time.
Life still complicated.
No real time to work on jets, more space, no time.
Life still complicated.
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Re: Ducted Ramjet that is meant to fly.
Fill it with a water based saline solution allowing for evaporation cooling through small holes in the inlet spike. Providing it is hollow or drilled out interior.
Retro Flight
RetroFlight.com
RetroFlight.com
Re: Ducted Ramjet that is meant to fly.
hmm... is there any chance you could try cutting it while it's still hot and a bit more malleable? I don't know much about such things, but, I would think that holding a blow torch to the area (if that doesn't crack it) would allow a little more leniency when you try cutting it with the laser. Maybe even an acetylene torch to pre heat it before cutting.
Also, when you tried to coat the steel with the ceramic, did it fall out in one piece, or flake off? maybe if you just cast it in there and let it pull itself off the walls...
meh, good luck on your project! I probably didn't help any, but you never know...
Also, when you tried to coat the steel with the ceramic, did it fall out in one piece, or flake off? maybe if you just cast it in there and let it pull itself off the walls...
meh, good luck on your project! I probably didn't help any, but you never know...
Lasers, jets, and helicopters HURAH!