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96 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
96 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2612
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Title: HPR2612: Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Joe aka Concrete Dog
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2612/hpr2612.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:33:08
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---
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This is HBR episode 2612 entitled Limitool Makefast 2018, Inter-New Window Acker Concreted
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on, and in part on the series, Inter-New, it is hosted by Tony Hughes aka Tony H1212
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and is about six minutes long, and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is an Inter-New Window from Limitool Makefast.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge
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by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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This is Tony Hughes for Acker Public Radio.
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I'm still at Liverpool Makefast and I've got with me.
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I'm Joe or better known, uh, online as Concrete Doc.
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Concrete Doc, I like that.
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Can you tell us what you're here for today?
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Well, I'm here. I'm pretty much obsessed with all things to do with space.
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So I've got a load of rockets with me starting from little tiny kind of Estes kits
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that anybody can buy and get off Amazon and launch in the park or a football field,
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obviously with permission. Through to, I'm also sit on the UK Rocketry Association Council,
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and I've got some of my big high-power rockets which lead a bit more,
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you lead a few more sort of certifications than things to fly.
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Yeah, I've actually just taken a picture of you with one of them,
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so that'll go into show notes.
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So how did you get into rocket?
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I actually got into rockets through another space-related thing.
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So I used to rule a forum for people building a small form factor of satellite called pocket cubes.
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So I've been obsessed with these amateurs building satellites that go into low earth orbit,
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and it kind of just led me down the rabbit hole of looking at all things space.
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Yes, somebody bought me a small Estes rocket,
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and then of course, cut to two years later, my house is full of massive rocket airframes,
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and I'm building Lermen going around and doing workshops about them and all kinds of stuff.
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I keep seeing YouTube videos of people sending things up with Raspberry Pi's,
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is they got anything to do with your rocket?
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Well, this one that I'm right next to, which is quite a small rocket,
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in this it's not a Raspberry Pi, but I built a little
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altimeter of, it's an Arduino Pro Mini attached to a little SD card and breakout board,
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and I can't remember which barometric, oh, sorry, it sounded like somebody let off a rocket,
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but it was some air pressure. So a little barometric pressure sensor,
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I just kind of wired them all together and wrote some code after it,
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it works as an altimeter so I can tell how high my rockets have gone.
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Oh, that's really cool. So what do you use for actually programming them?
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So the Arduino stuff, I just, I've got Linux, I'll be latch up and just, yeah, a little, you know,
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serial, I can't remember, it's really a CP2102, sorry. Yeah, some of the bigger rockets,
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people build all sorts of aviolics into them, things that deploy extra charges so that they
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can do multi-stage release of parachutes, so that you can release a really small one at
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apogee, and then a really big one when you say 100 meters off the ground, people build
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beacon's GPS systems to locate, some of the big ones might end up, you know, a couple of miles away,
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so, so having, you know, having a GPS system that will send back its location or a radio beacon,
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you can kind of triangulate, download, it's pretty useful. Do you have cameras on any of them?
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Yeah, lots of, I haven't done so much of that because I've done a couple, there's a classic
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picture of a library, I said well up and I forgot to set the date right, and it looks like I've
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invented a time machine because it's like the date stamp in the call, it says it's like 27 or so.
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But yeah, lots of people send cameras up, and lots of people actually send cameras up obviously
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to catch images of the earth, but to, to sort of film bits of their rocket to see how they
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actually separate, so usually there's a kind of, you know, to see what's going on, you know.
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Like that famous satin one where one of the boosters is dropping off.
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Yeah, exactly, yeah, and like it's a great hobby because like I'm really into designing and building
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my own designs, but there it's got that whole thing of like, there's people who do, you know,
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and scale model rockets that are like, you know, I haven't got the patience or the skill to do it,
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but like they build these amazing scale things, then there are people who do like, you know,
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competition rockets for like the smallest, you know, like thing that can carry an egg and return
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it to it. There's all kinds of different aspects, including altitude records.
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I'm currently the UK, I hold the altitude record for the, the smallest class of rocket,
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which is A impulse rocketry, which are the smallest rocket motors you can get. So I've got this
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tiny airframe here that's about, this tiny rocket that's about, what's that? 6, 8 inches long,
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see I was going to go SI units there, like 20, 20 celibators. I'm old-school.
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And I got, it holds the current altitude record of 244 meters, no sorry,
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240 meters, and the old record was 140, and I beat it through reducing the mass by using
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some clever 3D printing ideas and stuff. Well, include a picture of that in the show notes.
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So the bigger rockets, what's the altitude record, your personal altitude record for some of
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your bigger rockets? Not very high actually. I've got less than a kilometer. I couldn't tell you
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the exact height, but I've got plans for the, I'm going to build something sort of about the size
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of this big black airframe in the background that hopefully I'd like to get up to, like sort of,
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maybe the next couple of years I'd like to be lucky on five or six kilometers and beyond that
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who knows. I've just got this other big airframe here that I'm speaking later on that. I've also
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opened source in some of my designs because I want, I would really love more people to get into
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high power rock tree in the UK. It's difficult to get the kits that over here that a lot of them
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in the US. So yeah, I'm trying to open source my designs as much as possible so that other people
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have a bit of a clue, even if they just look at them to get ideas. So where would we find those
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we want you to look for them? If you search out a concrete dog, you'll get a load of people selling
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lies garden ornaments and somewhere amongst it you'll find all my nonsense and then you'll find
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the link to my get. So yeah, search concrete dog. Right, thank you very much and thank you for
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agreeing to be interviewed. No problem, man. Thank you.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org. We are a community
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