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Join Us At 0900ET, Friday, 4/10, for the LIVE Morning Brief.
Watch It LIVE at
www.airborne-live.net

Fri, May 10, 2013

Alabama, West Virginia Cadets Competing In Team America Rocketry Challenge

CAP Teams Among The 100 To Fly Rockets This Weekend

Civil Air Patrol cadets from the Alabama and West Virginia wings make up two of the 100 teams that will compete this weekend in the Team America Rocketry Challenge in The Plains, VA. Teams representing the Alabama Wing’s 117th ANG Composite Squadron, based in Birmingham, and the West Virginia Wing’s Martinsburg Composite Squadron reached the field of finalists after proving themselves equal to this year’s challenge.

Teams were called on to design a rocket that weighs 650 grams or less and can carry a large grade-A egg lying on its side to an altitude of 750 feet, then return the payload to the ground using a 15-inch parachute in 48-50 seconds without breaking the egg. The top 100 teams, which represent 29 states and the U.S. Virgin Islands, emerged from a 725-team national competition that’s now in its 11th year.

“Qualifying within the top 100 is an incredibly challenging and exciting achievement,” said Marion C. Blakey, president and CEO of the Aerospace Industries Association, which works with the National Association of Rocketry and such industry partners as Raytheon Co. and Lockheed Martin to sponsor the competition. “But equally impressive are the nearly 5,000 students who were inspired to explore science, engineering and technology through their participation in this year’s challenge.”

Both Civil Air Patrol teams experienced some tense moments in reaching the finals. When the Alabama cadets launched what they hoped would be their qualifying flight, they noticed that the rocket motor was fitting more tightly than usual, but they proceeded anyway. That proved to be a mistake, as the motor proved too powerful and they were never able to recover the projectile’s nose cone, which contained the egg and the altimeter.

The next weekend, after they build a new nose cone, bad weather prohibited a follow-up attempt. Thanks to spring break, however, some of the cadets had a chance for one last trip to the launching site. The ensuing last-ditch flight allowed them to meet the competition’s specifications just a few hours before the deadline for submitting the qualifying information.

In West Virginia, the Martinsburg cadets also survived a series of setbacks – including two catastrophic engine failures that forced them to repeatedly rebuild their rocket. Their last qualifying flight allowed them to make it to the final 100.

Teams will compete for the national title, with the top 10 finishers splitting more than $60,000 in scholarships. Top teams also have a chance to participate in NASA’s Student Launch Initiative, an advanced rocketry program.

(Top photo: Alabama Wing. Cadet 2nd Lt. Naomi Shea, the 117th ANG Composite Squadron’s rocketry team captain, shows the finished rocket to her teammates – (from left)  Cadet Airman Basic DeVorien Owens, Cadet Airman 1st Class Joseph Craig, Cadet Staff Sgt. Quinton Harvill, Cadet Airman Basic Christian Sims, Cadet 2nd Lt Charles Yarbrough and Cadet Airman Basic Cadet Kenneth Horne. Bottom photo: The West Virginia Wing’s Martinsburg Composite Squadron rocketry team – (from left) Cadet Senior Master Sgt. Nicole Orr, Cadet Airman Nicholas Heredia, Cadet Chief Master Sgt. Casey Densmore and Cadet 2nd Lt. Kenneth May. Images provided by CAP)

FMI: www.gocivilairpatrol.com

 


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