There's a fairly robust community that builds and launches water rockets. You know, regular rockets in pretty much every way except for the fact that they use pressurized water and air to launch into the sky. One such water rocket from a South African team of students at the University of Cape Town just broke the world altitude record with it's most recent attempt.
The university team managed to grab the record thanks in part to an extremely lightweight frame. The rocket's frame weighs just over three pounds counting the on-board camera, parachute system, flight computer, and carbon fiber skeleton. The team had tried for the record two times before but had been plagued by equipment failure and air leaks. The third time took.
The group launched their rocket, which clocks in at around nine feet in height, two different times on August 26th to get an average between the two. The first made it to 2,740 feet and the second to 2,707 feet for a world record of 2,723 feet, averaged. That handily beat the previous 2,044 foot record, set in 2007 by a U.S. group.
(Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Sunday October 11 2015, @07:03PM
DHS has offices in South Africa? Do you have their local phone number?
Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 11 2015, @07:18PM
They have agents everywhere.
(Score: 2) by davester666 on Sunday October 11 2015, @07:53PM
They have jurisdiction EVERYWHERE, punk!