I hope you enjoyed this episode! I worked really hard on this, so if you liked it, please give this video a thumbs up and share it with people you think would find it interesting! If you haven't seen the other episodes to this series, check them out here: ua-cam.com/video/YRqliylx3aE/v-deo.html
I am an undergraduate in aerospace engineering at a university in South Korea. Recently, I started to study rockets, and I think my passion for them has increased through this video. Now we're building a rudimentary solid-fuel rocket, but we've been able to set our sights on developing a hybrid rocket. Thank you for creating this video.
As an undergrad electrical engineer, seeing other future engineers like Sam do this kind of work from scratch and do it successfully gives me hope. I hope to work with people like him in the future. Hardworking and dedicated students.
You really inspired me and motivated me so much at the last part of the video, I’m 17 rn and i will be studying mechanical engineering at TU Eindhoven after the summer. I really am grateful for your motivational attitude and the vibes you have
I have now put subtitles, for people who want to figure out exactly what we are saying at any point in this video! Also, if you haven't noticed already, Sam will be checking up on this video to answer some questions.
This was MIND BLOWING !!!😊😊😊ALSO your last lines about experience of working while being passionate about a thing was just GOLD... !!!!!! you have made me realize the meaning of being passionate about something .This surely is my most liked video 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
An AE student here!!! It's always good to know I'm not alone on the road of rocketry... Thanks for the inspiring videos. Keep me updated about your school life!
DUDE there is no better feeling then having AAAAAALL of your hard work pay off! Those 5 seconds were glorious and very well worth it. You gained experience and knowledge that was unteachable in a classroom. What more could you ask for.
jesus bro ive seen some people try to make a liquid rocket engine and they've been met with limited success but you absolutely killed it perfect firing!!! great job awesome!
Dude you’re awesome and shoutout to Sam as someone who switched from mechanical to Computer science my sophomore year, I appreciate and really respect the work both you guys put into your work. Hella dope man keep it up 🤘🏿
You and your friends inspire me! I returned to school later in my life. I do mostly online courses and on campus on occasion. After, I watched the Sam's propulsion video. I felt proud and enjoy seeing the camaraderie and friendships you have.
I built a liquid fuel rocket in high school using concentrated nitric acid and 80/20 blend of turpentine/Furfuryl alcohol the engine was pressure feed using dry ice to supply pressure. The engine was made of stainless steel with a stainless steel insert nozzle. The injectors were parallel cylinders with semi-circular spray pattern opposing each other. The get the proper flow and ratio ... the number of injector holes was determined experimentally using water. The fuel and oxidizer tanks were made of aluminum tubing 3 inches OD, 1/8 wall thickness . The engine was static fired twice and the third time flown, the burn time was 7 seconds. The parachute failed but the rocket performed well. The combustion chamber cooling was supplied by the fuel with a simple tubular steel jacket. The nozzle was not cooled but as it was machined from stainless steel bar stock made for a heat sink. I made the drawings and had a little help with the calculations from and rocket engineer working for Bell Aerospace (a neighbor) the construction was done by a friend as a shop project in the high school shop, (some instructor) time went into the making. Our materials were more challenging than the soft band iron projects other kids worked with .... we also had to so some wet sand casting of aluminium. Age 15 years old the year before the shop project was a large solid propellant rocket. That too had a parachute failure and ended up in Lake Ontario and was flown once, the parachute ejection tested once at the same time a burst plug was tested on the motor. The rocket was constructed of low carbon steel ....SAE 1020, we were serious rocket boys and we lucky not to have blown ourselves up. Our neighbors were glad to see us graduate and go on to University, we rattled the windows in the neighborhood a few times.
Nothing feels better than working with other people who share your same passions, interests, and drive for success. I am an engineer and have worked with wannabe engineers who just want a degree to collect a paycheck( they will fail and wash out), lazy people, you name it. But when you finally work with those true engineers and scientists, its truly an intellectual and emotional experience.
many people might not get it. there is so much difference when an experienced man creates a rocket and a student. a student is happier when he success because he is still a newbie. when he realize that he succeed then you have to know all of that complicated measurements were right.
the speech in the end got me... truthful and honest about yourself. like from me .. subscribed. go onward . fullfill your dreams ( i am german so ignore language errors)
I just love these kinds of YTChannels, bringing to people what you learn in your day to day life. I myself am an engineer, I begin to question what I have learnt. Thanks for sharing such amazing experiences :)
MIT mechanical and aerospace engineers are doing tests on rocket engines whereas we as students of engg. colleges in india don't have enough time to complete records.Wonderful...
I will be enrolling for Aerospace Engineering course in Brunel University in London, and goddamn these type of videos inspire me even more, great job guys, great job Sam and will be looking forward to these videos in the future!
Hey I'm a MIT Prefrosh planning to go into course 16. Your videos are awesome and really get me excited for the program. I'm also into film production and I'm at the Student Television Network (STN) Convention in Seattle right now. Over the past couple of days I've seen a ton of videos but your videos top most of them! Keep doing with your doing.
Wow, I haven't cried in years and suddenly the moment the engine ignited made me cry from being proud of Sam's achievement. Great project, also great documentary, you both rock! 🤟 - Fresh Aviation student from Latvia
This video is so well done on so many levels. It's good to see someone combine knowledge with wisdom about knowledge, and aware they are doing it. But... MIT students? Or are you guys all in film school, pretending to be rocket scientists? There's not a nerd in sight! :-) Seriously, well done. Of course, there's always one quibble. You showed us an experiment, but didn't give us the full results. Yes, it fired, but did it reach its design performance? A minute of him looking at his data would have been great, make this self-contained. Although I will look here for the forthcoming video/link by him. Sam, congrats on an awesome piece of work, and good luck on your SpaceX internships. Am a huge fan of space rocketry since watching the Mercury/Gemini/Apollo as a kid. Tremendously excited by what SpaceX is doing.
Thanks Don! The engine was designed for 1,500 lbf thrust but actually hit around 1,300 lbf because of issues calibrating the helium gas regulators prior to the test. Because the regulators weren't set quite correctly, the propellant tank pressure was slightly lower than required and thus the chamber pressure and thrust were lower than expected.
This is inspiring. I am a junior in college and have been getting a little burnt out. Watching This video made me realize what i'm missing and that outside of school passion. Thank you so much and i look forward to your success at MIT.
Sometimes you'll ask yourself why are you so stupid to keep studying this, it just takes so much effort. But I guarantee you that, at the end of the day, you'll love what you do. 0 regrets.
Crazy awesome stuff Sam! I'm interested in rocket propulsion too. I'm really happy you get to be doing what you love and I hope I get to join you one day!
this is an inspirational, yet emotional video. i hope one day i'll achieve my dreams like him. even from the smallest part. it its my dream to go to MIT too. i hope i get the opportunites to learn there at MIT. and i'm ready to work hard for my dreams.
Sam followed his dream and what he was passionate abt..and now the result is, he is at internship with SPACEX isn't all of it he did worth...woah...bless u Sam ...i wanna become an aeronautical engineer too...wish i become one❤️😄🤗
literally my eyes filled with i thing a combination of salt and water when he said that what was the worth of spending this much resource on a 3 second thrust. I felt that. I too made a rocket thruster. Nobody supported me, so i took challenge alone and made it through. But i had failures and am happy for that because life of an engineer is full of failures. As 16 year old in country like India you dont get much freedom to do whatever you want. But am happy to see the video. Lets see will be applying this year. Am excited for more goosebumps by performing my own rocketry designs.
Great video and good job to all of you, for some people it might be easy but the creativity, the engineering and the calculations before that is what it counts!
10:12 everyone got scared he didnt. Looks like he knew exactly what will haven. Checked the calculations. Did his home work. I couldnt do half of what he did. Good job man!
In high school, I teamed up with a buddy taking metal shop. We built a bipropellant hypergolic rocket and flew our rocket. Our parachute failed, and the rocket is now at the bottom of Lake Ontario, NY near Sodus Point. I did the design work and got some pointers from a young Aerospace engineer working for Bell Aerospace on NASA's Agena rocket during project Gemini. He helped me calculate the stress and strain for our propellant tanks and airframe. Using dry ice sublimation, our rocket pressure-fed the propellants to push red-fuming nitric acid and furfuryl alcohol into a stainless steel combustion chamber. The valves to start the flow were our own design; we used black powder to open the values when commanded by an electrical squib. The tanks were made of aluminum, the plumbing was made of stainless steel, and the nose cone was fashioned by my friend on a wood lathe. We static-fired the engine once, and many oractices runs with water. Our burn time was 7 seconds and the maximum thrust was at time zero and fell as the delivered pressure fell. Based on time of flight it reached approximately 2000 feet altitude. We had a better record that NASA! All their rockets blew-up on their frist flight test. My friend went to junior college and worked as a shift worked for Chevy, later got a degree and went to Law School. I went to school in the midwest known for Aerospace engineering, but working full time made long labs impossible so I switched to Physics and Chemistry and worked in Chemical research after starting in a control lab on rotating shifts. I did not have the grades in HS for MIT or high enough test scores to offset my GPA. MIT was top teer, the top 1% students. My buddy and I were maybe in the top third in a competitive high school. My only school talent was the sciences, and I was not handy working a lathe like my buddy, for him, science beyond auto mechanics was not really his thing.
As a mechatronics engineer I now the feeling of making something, doing calculations over and over again And seeing it succeed in a practical test is just a feeling incomparable
That was fucking awesome!! I had goosebumps and was tearing up because of the awesomeness of this project. You guys just made me more excited to pursue aerospace engineering!!
Its so insipiring to watch ..this ..after days of puting alot of work on the project then ,testing the project is such a great satisfaction and very inspirational.thanks for the video
Excellent work, team! Very impressive. Hold onto that spent engine and consider putting it on your fireplace mantel when you have your first home. It is sure to intrigue your guests and be a great conversation piece. Also, always get the insurance on your Uhaul.
I hope you enjoyed this episode! I worked really hard on this, so if you liked it, please give this video a thumbs up and share it with people you think would find it interesting! If you haven't seen the other episodes to this series, check them out here: ua-cam.com/video/YRqliylx3aE/v-deo.html
thats a real achievement making an rokect end to end successfully. AMAZING WORK!!
At which semester you are studying bro😊😊
@@abhishekpoudel6701 dude its MIT there pracs n theory go hand in hand not like xD
It was amazing . Truely insane I was in tears literally when I saw it work. Thankyou so much for this video .It's very very inspiring.
It was awesome.
I do have a model which could give a bit more thrust and chamber pressure, with lesser fuel flow in chamber.
I guess it will help you.
Sam is no joke - awesome test, awesome video!
What are you doing here. You should be working on that next video.
@@deldrise9169 yikes
Lol.
@@BPSspace but seriously, we are waiting.
@@deldrise9169 Videos come out when they are ready, science can't be rushed. Be patient or unsubscribe.
Man the joy on this face is priceless. He did it...
they did it
That is why MIT is the best university in the world
For Scientists and Engineers, yes.
Brendan Ellis nope it actually is the best uni, it’s clearly ranked no.1 regardless of which major.
Sheldon Cooper disagrees lol
Capital capital capital...
@@capt.ronaldspeirs1591 what do u mean by capital?
I am an undergraduate in aerospace engineering at a university in South Korea. Recently, I started to study rockets, and I think my passion for them has increased through this video. Now we're building a rudimentary solid-fuel rocket, but we've been able to set our sights on developing a hybrid rocket. Thank you for creating this video.
that sounds realy nice
@@valorkaizen thank you!
That sounds very interesting. All the best
All the best bro you got it 💪💯
What school??
when he said " WE DID IT " as an electronic engineer i really felt their happiness !!! nice work guys!!!
electronic engineers are always the least appreciated for the most critical rolls lol
As an undergrad electrical engineer, seeing other future engineers like Sam do this kind of work from scratch and do it successfully gives me hope. I hope to work with people like him in the future. Hardworking and dedicated students.
You really inspired me and motivated me so much at the last part of the video, I’m 17 rn and i will be studying mechanical engineering at TU Eindhoven after the summer. I really am grateful for your motivational attitude and the vibes you have
Imagine having to write up this lab report. The anxiety I just gave myself lol
Please continues with vídeos about days in aerospace engineering
I have now put subtitles, for people who want to figure out exactly what we are saying at any point in this video! Also, if you haven't noticed already, Sam will be checking up on this video to answer some questions.
Hey dude pin this comment on top
This was MIND BLOWING !!!😊😊😊ALSO your last lines about experience of working while being passionate about a thing was just GOLD... !!!!!! you have made me realize the meaning of being passionate about something .This surely is my most liked video 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
An AE student here!!! It's always good to know I'm not alone on the road of rocketry... Thanks for the inspiring videos. Keep me updated about your school life!
DUDE there is no better feeling then having AAAAAALL of your hard work pay off! Those 5 seconds were glorious and very well worth it. You gained experience and knowledge that was unteachable in a classroom. What more could you ask for.
jesus bro ive seen some people try to make a liquid rocket engine and they've been met with limited success but you absolutely killed it perfect firing!!! great job awesome!
Congratulations! It was amazing to see the pride in your face but also support of everyone there, being so happy for you
Dude you’re awesome and shoutout to Sam as someone who switched from mechanical to Computer science my sophomore year, I appreciate and really respect the work both you guys put into your work. Hella dope man keep it up 🤘🏿
Such a great video. Great production quality - it told the story well, I totally felt the emotion. And great work on the engine too! So exciting!
Congratulations, I love what you do! Thank you very much for this opportunity to see what you do at MIT!
I'm also a first year aero student. Sam is on a different level, respect
Oh, I feel ... envy.
In my university we only enjoy difficult exams and few hours of sleep.
Where do u go???
@@Armand__ india 100%
its our fate
Yo I'm back 2 years later to say that I now understand your pain.
@@Armand__ XD
@@Armand__ i fucking wanna do aerospace engineering... parents also fully accept it but what to do in india. gotta take the sat/acts
I just went through the video and it was amazingly done, hats off !!! Congrats and good luck.
THIS IS SO AWESOME AND INSPIRING, So proud of this guy! Amazing Test, Great video man.
You and your friends inspire me! I returned to school later in my life. I do mostly online courses and on campus on occasion. After, I watched the Sam's propulsion video. I felt proud and enjoy seeing the camaraderie and friendships you have.
I built a liquid fuel rocket in high school using concentrated nitric acid and 80/20 blend of turpentine/Furfuryl alcohol the engine was pressure feed using dry ice to supply pressure. The engine was made of stainless steel with a stainless steel insert nozzle. The injectors were parallel cylinders with semi-circular spray pattern opposing each other. The get the proper flow and ratio ... the number of injector holes was determined experimentally using water. The fuel and oxidizer tanks were made of aluminum tubing 3 inches OD, 1/8 wall thickness . The engine was static fired twice and the third time flown, the burn time was 7 seconds. The parachute failed but the rocket performed well. The combustion chamber cooling was supplied by the fuel with a simple tubular steel jacket. The nozzle was not cooled but as it was machined from stainless steel bar stock made for a heat sink. I made the drawings and had a little help with the calculations from and rocket engineer working for Bell Aerospace (a neighbor) the construction was done by a friend as a shop project in the high school shop, (some instructor) time went into the making. Our materials were more challenging than the soft band iron projects other kids worked with .... we also had to so some wet sand casting of aluminium. Age 15 years old the year before the shop project was a large solid propellant rocket. That too had a parachute failure and ended up in Lake Ontario and was flown once, the parachute ejection tested once at the same time a burst plug was tested on the motor. The rocket was constructed of low carbon steel ....SAE 1020, we were serious rocket boys and we lucky not to have blown ourselves up. Our neighbors were glad to see us graduate and go on to University, we rattled the windows in the neighborhood a few times.
Beautiful! I wish my engineering school had the ability to do such projects.
This felt more like a suspense and inspirational video than just something about aeronautics engineering.Felt surreal.Great work mate.Keep it up.
you are very underrated KJ. Thank you for these very inspiring and insightful videos.
Nothing feels better than working with other people who share your same passions, interests, and drive for success. I am an engineer and have worked with wannabe engineers who just want a degree to collect a paycheck( they will fail and wash out), lazy people, you name it. But when you finally work with those true engineers and scientists, its truly an intellectual and emotional experience.
That rocket sounds like a symphony to me
The sheer awesomeness and power in that small engine is breathtaking
many people might not get it.
there is so much difference when an experienced man creates a rocket and a student.
a student is happier when he success because he is still a newbie. when he realize that he succeed then you have to know all of that complicated measurements were right.
the speech in the end got me... truthful and honest about yourself. like from me ..
subscribed. go onward . fullfill your dreams
( i am german so ignore language errors)
Production value of this video 👌
I just love these kinds of YTChannels, bringing to people what you learn in your day to day life. I myself am an engineer, I begin to question what I have learnt. Thanks for sharing such amazing experiences :)
See this what we need more of in school. Applying the book work and hardwork including soft skills and experiencing the fruits of you labors.
MIT mechanical and aerospace engineers are doing tests on rocket engines whereas we as students of engg. colleges in india don't have enough time to complete records.Wonderful...
I'm from Vietnam, and I'm trying to get into MIT, I really admire you. Thank you for bringing this useful information.
good luck
@@petruradu7242 thanks you.
Amazing video! Thank you very much for sharing. Congratulations to Sam on the successful fire! So happy for you guys!
I will be enrolling for Aerospace Engineering course in Brunel University in London, and goddamn these type of videos inspire me even more, great job guys, great job Sam and will be looking forward to these videos in the future!
Hey I'm a MIT Prefrosh planning to go into course 16. Your videos are awesome and really get me excited for the program. I'm also into film production and I'm at the Student Television Network (STN) Convention in Seattle right now. Over the past couple of days I've seen a ton of videos but your videos top most of them! Keep doing with your doing.
That was fantastic and when the rocket engine ignited... That was definitely a goosebumps moment
I have been working on a hybrid engine as well... since last 6 months. Scheduled to test on march. Hope everything goes well
How did it go?
You should upload more videos like this. This is god dam inspiring..
Wow, I haven't cried in years and suddenly the moment the engine ignited made me cry from being proud of Sam's achievement.
Great project, also great documentary, you both rock! 🤟
- Fresh Aviation student from Latvia
This video is so well done on so many levels. It's good to see someone combine knowledge with wisdom about knowledge, and aware they are doing it. But... MIT students? Or are you guys all in film school, pretending to be rocket scientists? There's not a nerd in sight! :-)
Seriously, well done. Of course, there's always one quibble. You showed us an experiment, but didn't give us the full results. Yes, it fired, but did it reach its design performance? A minute of him looking at his data would have been great, make this self-contained. Although I will look here for the forthcoming video/link by him. Sam, congrats on an awesome piece of work, and good luck on your SpaceX internships. Am a huge fan of space rocketry since watching the Mercury/Gemini/Apollo as a kid. Tremendously excited by what SpaceX is doing.
Thanks Don! The engine was designed for 1,500 lbf thrust but actually hit around 1,300 lbf because of issues calibrating the helium gas regulators prior to the test. Because the regulators weren't set quite correctly, the propellant tank pressure was slightly lower than required and thus the chamber pressure and thrust were lower than expected.
Sam Austin this is a late reply but wouldn’t the engine have more power if you give the nozzle a better shape.
This is inspiring. I am a junior in college and have been getting a little burnt out. Watching This video made me realize what i'm missing and that outside of school passion. Thank you so much and i look forward to your success at MIT.
Congrats Sam. Welcome to the club.
IB
HOLY THATS... HOLY TOTALY BREATHTAKING I LOVE THAT FEELING 1 year of work for 1 min or less of sucess
You are literally living my dream. An aerospace engineer at MIT!
I'm hell passionate about rockets that's why pursuing MIT for next year. BTW building one now as well.
Lakshay Garg go for aerospace engineering too! Good luck!!
@@lineah4508 yeah, thanks 😋
@Just Normal 🤪
Sometimes you'll ask yourself why are you so stupid to keep studying this, it just takes so much effort. But I guarantee you that, at the end of the day, you'll love what you do. 0 regrets.
@@rubensimon48 I'm already loving it.
Crazy awesome stuff Sam! I'm interested in rocket propulsion too. I'm really happy you get to be doing what you love and I hope I get to join you one day!
this is an inspirational, yet emotional video. i hope one day i'll achieve my dreams like him. even from the smallest part. it its my dream to go to MIT too. i hope i get the opportunites to learn there at MIT. and i'm ready to work hard for my dreams.
Sam followed his dream and what he was passionate abt..and now the result is, he is at internship with SPACEX isn't all of it he did worth...woah...bless u Sam ...i wanna become an aeronautical engineer too...wish i become one❤️😄🤗
amazing vid. these day in the life videos are incredible
I know exactly how that moment before success nervousness feels. Congratulations man!
literally my eyes filled with i thing a combination of salt and water when he said that what was the worth of spending this much resource on a 3 second thrust. I felt that. I too made a rocket thruster. Nobody supported me, so i took challenge alone and made it through. But i had failures and am happy for that because life of an engineer is full of failures. As 16 year old in country like India you dont get much freedom to do whatever you want. But am happy to see the video. Lets see will be applying this year. Am excited for more goosebumps by performing my own rocketry designs.
Well done man! Awesome rocket test!
The 3 seconds of thrust was like awsome .Cheers
You have a genuine passion that can't be hidden. You would make a Great Motivational Speaker if you didn't know. You have motivated me already.
Great video and good job to all of you, for some people it might be easy but the creativity, the engineering and the calculations before that is what it counts!
I’ve done several static hot fire tests at FAR with SDSU Rocket Project. There really is nothing like that experience! So cool!
Oh man, you are inspiring me so much with these videos! Keep it up please!
9:30 Your words made me cry😭
Really liked your message towards the end of the video man!!!
10:12 everyone got scared he didnt. Looks like he knew exactly what will haven. Checked the calculations. Did his home work. I couldnt do half of what he did. Good job man!
In high school, I teamed up with a buddy taking metal shop. We built a bipropellant hypergolic rocket and flew our rocket. Our parachute failed, and the rocket is now at the bottom of Lake Ontario, NY near Sodus Point. I did the design work and got some pointers from a young Aerospace engineer working for Bell Aerospace on NASA's Agena rocket during project Gemini. He helped me calculate the stress and strain for our propellant tanks and airframe. Using dry ice sublimation, our rocket pressure-fed the propellants to push red-fuming nitric acid and furfuryl alcohol into a stainless steel combustion chamber. The valves to start the flow were our own design; we used black powder to open the values when commanded by an electrical squib. The tanks were made of aluminum, the plumbing was made of stainless steel, and the nose cone was fashioned by my friend on a wood lathe. We static-fired the engine once, and many oractices runs with water. Our burn time was 7 seconds and the maximum thrust was at time zero and fell as the delivered pressure fell. Based on time of flight it reached approximately 2000 feet altitude. We had a better record that NASA! All their rockets blew-up on their frist flight test. My friend went to junior college and worked as a shift worked for Chevy, later got a degree and went to Law School. I went to school in the midwest known for Aerospace engineering, but working full time made long labs impossible so I switched to Physics and Chemistry and worked in Chemical research after starting in a control lab on rotating shifts. I did not have the grades in HS for MIT or high enough test scores to offset my GPA. MIT was top teer, the top 1% students. My buddy and I were maybe in the top third in a competitive high school. My only school talent was the sciences, and I was not handy working a lathe like my buddy, for him, science beyond auto mechanics was not really his thing.
As a mechatronics engineer I now the feeling of making something, doing calculations over and over again
And seeing it succeed in a practical test is just a feeling incomparable
Interesting. What do you do?
That was fucking awesome!! I had goosebumps and was tearing up because of the awesomeness of this project. You guys just made me more excited to pursue aerospace engineering!!
Its so insipiring to watch ..this ..after days of puting alot of work on the project then ,testing the project is such a great satisfaction and very inspirational.thanks for the video
Excellent work, team! Very impressive. Hold onto that spent engine and consider putting it on your fireplace mantel when you have your first home. It is sure to intrigue your guests and be a great conversation piece. Also, always get the insurance on your Uhaul.
Sam can become a great engineer
Vaidik Vashistha He is**
Its worth it.... All i can say u are the future....keep it going..
Big respect to Sam✊. It is amazing that you guys are friends; I guess greatness truly does recognizes greatness :)
Love this video! Excitement of launching rocket 😍
Love from Bangladesh
Nicely documented! Interesting details - will stay tuned for upcoming videos!
Will soon Start my aerospace journey from iist Tiruvandrum (isro🇮🇳) this year... it's really satisfying to see this rocket engine test...😃
Hopefully MIT lets me in on PI day and I can start doing this cool stuff and meet u on the court MITTechGuy
The first time the engines fired, I was like meh,
at 10:10 , I realized it's power.
Great job!
A channel we where waiting for 💕
I can see those smiles bro it would definitely be a jackpot one 😊
Congratulations. Very nice static test.
This video was awesome and i liked it a lot. Looking forward for ep5
FAR rocketry test site - much love from SDSU. I love that place, shout out to Rick
THIS IS INSPIRATIONAL
what a nice video man
9:30 this the very important part i could feel the energy of the rocket
is Sam an undergrad student ? or a grad student?
un
incredible, well made video!
Awesome Sam!
Just seeing this work made me happy.
10:12 that boi tough, he did not even flinced when he pulled the trigger
Great future ahead guys.... you deserve it. Greetings from Canary Island
This has started my interest in rocketry making my first hobbiest motto soon can’t wait XD
The close ups are hella fucking cool
Oh damn he finally smiled when he said he felt incredible
Fantastic Video. This looks like a lot of fun and I am actually going to start looking into this. Thanks y’all
You people are such an inspiration.
I literally got goosebumps
how the thing just Cool Creation..
like it..