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ULA Interns Launch Record-Breaking 50-Foot Rocket (space.com) 79

schwit1 writes: A team of United Launch Alliance (ULA) interns, working in their spare time, have successfully launched the largest model rocket every built. Space.com reports: "On Sunday (July 24), ULA launched the 50-foot-tall (15.24 meters) Future Heavy rocket out of Fort Carson Army Post, breaking the record for 'the largest sport rocket launched anywhere in the world,' according to a statement from ULA. The Future Heavy is also notable because it was built entirely by company interns and their mentors. 'We like [our interns] to have a very realistic experience,' ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno told Space.com at the Space Symposium meeting in Colorado Springs, Colorado, last April." Calling it a "model rocket" really isn't fair. The thing is big, and really ranks up there with many of the suborbital rockets NASA used to routinely fly out of Wallops Island. [The fact that] ULA has provided support for this effort again suggests that the leadership of Bruno is reshaping the company into a much more innovative and competitive company.
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ULA Interns Launch Record-Breaking 50-Foot Rocket

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  • "Model rocket" eh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Thursday July 28, 2016 @06:58AM (#52597725)

    The German V-2 rocket [wikipedia.org] was smaller than this thing, and it's been accurately described as the first successful ballistic missile.

    It just goes to show, depending on who builds it, something may be an enlightened amateur rocket or a dangerous enemy weapon.

    • by DrXym ( 126579 )
      It's not the length that matters but the girth.
    • The German V-2 rocket was smaller than this thing, and it's been accurately described as the first successful ballistic missile.

      It just goes to show, depending on who builds it, something may be an enlightened amateur rocket or a dangerous enemy weapon.

      As the old saying goes, "it's not how big it is, it's how you use it".

    • It just goes to show, depending on who builds it, something may be an enlightened amateur rocket or a dangerous enemy weapon.

      That's ridiculous. For one thing, this is an amateur rocket because they were not paid to build it. Even more importantly, where the device is aimed and what it is supposed to do when it gets there, is what determines if it is a weapon or not.

      • by chihowa ( 366380 )

        Most importantly, is the obvious presence of an explosive warhead on the V-2 and its absence on a hobby rocket (or any other rocket that isn't thought of as a weapon).

        Had these interns put a 910 kg explosive warhead on this thing, I'm sure people would consider it a dangerous weapon, even if they never aimed it at anyone or intended it to explode when it arrived.

    • It just goes to show, depending on who builds it, something may be an enlightened amateur rocket or a dangerous enemy weapon.

      - false. This rocket is long, but it only weighs 1200 pounds [natureworldnews.com]. V-2 weighed almost 27,600 pounds and it had a 1000kg warhead on it that could be delivered to a 300km distance from launch.

      I don't think it's just the name here that makes the difference.

    • The two are incomparable. The V2 was a power beast, fuelled by ethanol/water and liquid oxygen, it flew far higher and much further while at the same time carrying a heavy payload.

      (V2 verses Future Heavy - lateral range 350 Km verses maybe 5 Km, altitude ceiling 200 Km verses 3 Km, Payload 1 ton (1000 Kg) verses maybe 20 Kg)

      (Posted in wrong place before!)

  • by johnhennessy ( 94737 ) on Thursday July 28, 2016 @07:23AM (#52597797)

    Supposed to be a 1/5 th model of the Shuttle:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    The SRBs were 150ft tall, so 1/5 would make it only 30 feet. But there are two of them!!

  • Meh. The SpaceX interns got theirs to land tail-first and is reusable!

    /just kidding. I feel I need to add that in case someone actually is tempted to go looking for it.

  • Their whole marketing department has probably come down with depression over the last few years, so it's clearly time to trot out the interns doing something fun and not particularly consequential. Maybe next year they'll do a viral video.

    (For the record, I'd like to see them doing well again. The more competition at the cutting edge, the better. But they got complacent, and it looks like SpaceX is about to eat the rest of their lunch, with Blue Origin possibly stealing a bit, too.)

  • HA! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Thursday July 28, 2016 @07:46AM (#52597911)

    . [The fact that] ULA has provided support for this effort again suggests that the leadership of Bruno is reshaping the company into a much more innovative and competitive company.

    No, what it means is that they are getting their asses beaten so badly by SpaceX that they have moved to desperation and PR tactics.

    • by dj245 ( 732906 )

      . [The fact that] ULA has provided support for this effort again suggests that the leadership of Bruno is reshaping the company into a much more innovative and competitive company.

      No, what it means is that they are getting their asses beaten so badly by SpaceX that they have moved to desperation and PR tactics.

      I see it as an attempt to keep their workforce engaged. I have worked on long-term (18month-30months before anything exciting happens) projects before and it is a long grind without a lot of incremental satisfaction. Even a company-paid milestone dinner every few months was a major morale booster since there was very little concrete evidence of all the work people were putting in. Employee turnover is very damaging to this type of long-term project, so launching a small rocket every now and then might be

  • by JeffOwl ( 2858633 ) on Thursday July 28, 2016 @08:51AM (#52598213)
    That could mean anything from the mentors pretty much designed the whole thing and used the interns for unskilled labor to the mentors stood back and watched the interns to make sure nobody got killed. Kind of like like the range in FIRST Robotics.
  • Couple of friggin' interns built a working rocket. That means a lot of math needing to be done right, a lot of engineering problems to overcome, a lot of thinking to be done, a lot of self-reliance and a spraying of some of the gung-ho proverbial of the rocket industry. I'm taking my hat off and making a large flourish.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      "built entirely by company interns and their mentors" means the company funded it and the experienced engineers did the hard part.

      Regarding the negativity, it's just one idiot. He obsessively posts the same crap in every story. Slashdot really should require people log in to post, even if they want to post AC. Then they can be tracked and banned.

    • Couple of friggin' interns built a working rocket.

      Not by themselves they didn't. They got help from experienced engineers and someone else funded it. It's kind of like US First competitions where much of the heavy lifting is actually done by real engineers and the students watch and (hopefully) learn and help out where they can. Now these interns are undoubtedly FAR more capable than a high school student and probably did quite a lot of the actual work but they also undoubtedly had a lot of help.

      It's not negativity, it's just that pretending that a bunc

      • When I was an intern, I was often the one doing the heavy lifting because I was up on the latest technology having learned it only months or weeks prior instead of having to learn about it from a journal using decades old math skills
        • When I was an intern, I was often the one doing the heavy lifting because I was up on the latest technology having learned it only months or weeks prior instead of having to learn about it from a journal using decades old math skills

          Please point me at any college program where they teach you the real details in how to build an actual working rocket using the latest technology. I'm sure these interns are smart people and I'm sure they did a very substantial amount on this project. I'm equally sure that the rocket would never have flown if it wasn't for some very experienced (literal) rocket scientists helping out. The "latest technology" in rocketry typically is not taught in schools. That's why this is such a great project - it all

  • A model rocket would have no function and would just sit there on a display stand...
    • A model rocket would have no function and would just sit there on a display stand...

      You seem confused. You can build a working model of something. I've built an Estes model of a Saturn V rocket that flew. Not a very accurate model but a working model all the same.

      Now calling this a "model" rocket doesn't make sense unless it is modeling some other rocket. Really this is just a rocket, not a model rocket.

  • Size does, in fact, matter

  • What type of engine was used? Hybrid? Bi-liquid?

  • Yes, yes, that's all very nice, but did it have a Reliant Robin attached to it?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • North Korea might be wanting to steal the plans, as this is more powerful and successful than any of their rocket launches...
  • . . .at least by the definitions used by the FAA. See CFR 14, 101.22 [ecfr.gov], viz.:

    101.22 Definitions.

    The following definitions apply to this subpart:

    (a) Class 1—Model Rocket means an amateur rocket that:
    (1) Uses no more than 125 grams (4.4 ounces) of propellant;
    (2) Uses a slow-burning propellant;
    (3) Is made of paper, wood, or breakable plastic;
    (4) Contains no substantial metal parts; and
    (5) Weighs no more than 1,500 grams (53 ounces), including the propellant.

    (b) Class 2—High-Power Rocket means an amateur rocket other than a model rocket that is propelled by a motor or motors having a combined total impulse of 40,960 Newton-seconds (9,208 pound-seconds) or less.

    (c) Class 3—Advanced High-Power Rocket means an amateur rocket other than a model rocket or high-power rocket.

    Using these definitions, in the US the rocket is legally either a "High-Power Rocket" or an "Advanced High-Power Rocket", depending on the total impulse of the motor(s), but it is clearly not a "Model Rocket."

  • Context, people. SpaceX wins the PR battle, even when their vehicles faceplant, because that is *how* you get your ass off the planet and into space, and every engineer, technician, scientist and anybody with even a smidgen of Captain Kirk's spiritual DNA knows it. Hey look, ULA can launch rockets, too! It's bigger than even a V2! Remember those, kiddies? What? Ixnay on the V-2? That's not a good thing? Well damnit, what should we do/say? And no, don't keep showing me youtube videos of spectacular

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