by kittyfritters » Mon Mar 07, 2016 8:45 pm
If you are flying giant scale rubber models with really big rubber motors a fully wound motor breaking can release as much energy as a quarter stick of dynamite. Now, that's equivalent energy, not explosive force, still, if you've got your hands anywhere near that motor when it comes through the side of the model you are going to feel it, (Don't hand stooge a large model for someone who isn't using a blast tube!), not to mention the destruction of the model! Even a motor made of 1/16" flat breaking will severely damage a light model like a peanut or dime scale. So, blast tubes are a good idea, even though I will admit that I don't always use one,
An interesting approach to this is to use a light weight Tyvek tube inside the model. A tube made of Tyvek is practically indestructible. It also has the advantage of keeping the rubber from flopping around in the fuselage, almost self lubricating to the rubber, allowing you to use a much longer motor than otherwise. Motors five times the hook to peg length can be handled with a Tyvek tube. A good source used to be non-tearing mail envelopes. Roll it around a dowel and glue with C/A. If a motor breaks inside a permanently installed Tyvek tube you grab it with your Oh Oh Stick (You do have a long wire hook in your field box to pull loose motors out of your models, don't you?), pull out the motor peg and drag the squirming motor out the front. The tube in the picture added only one gram to the model,
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