Construction Rating: | starstarstarstarstar |
Flight Rating: | starstarstarstarstar |
Overall Rating: | starstarstarstarstar |
Manufacturer: | Binder Design |
Brief:
The Binder Design Samurai is a single stage, high powered sport rocket available with either a 38mm or 54mm motor
mount. My kit is the 38mm version. The rocket features 8 cut, matched, and sanded plywood fins with a fin alignment
guide, mid-separation with a 34" payload bay, a pre-marked booster for cutting fin slots and placing lugs or
buttons, and a 45" parachute.
Construction:
The kit comes in the best packaging in the business and with all of the components necessary to complete the rocket
for flight. The packaging is very well laid out with all of the smaller parts in sub-packages within the main bag. The
kit included the following parts:
The Samurai was the fourth Binder Design rocket that I've built. That said, my expectations were high going in and I was certainly not disappointed.
The provided instructions are very thorough and well illustrated without overdoing it. No longer a "newbie" to building rockets like this one, I'm fairly certain that I could have successfully built my Samurai without the instructions and only a dimensional drawing. This time, the instructions felt to me more like a coach looking over my shoulder with words of encouragement with enough detail to bring along the first timer without being too tedious for someone who has done this before. Truly excellent.
The build sequence is well spelled out, logical, and without a single "gotcha":
Sure, this rocket is a nice and big, but in the end, it is a simple high powered rocket that goes together easily with a great set of instructions to walk you through it.
A couple of things that I did to vary from the instructions:
The use of wood glue is the strongest recommendation that this reviewer can pass on to anyone reading this. It is easier to work with, clean up, and is the strongest adhesive available for the components provided. The other modifications were strictly personal preference and not a noted deficiency to the kit.
This would also be the place to comment on the excellent customer service and support that Mike Fisher provides for his customers. I made a severely failed attempt to bevel the provided set of fins on my bench router. I completely barbecued them. An email to Mike had a fresh set on the way and the project was quickly back on track.
PROs: The best packaging in the business, instructions that are well suited for a wide range of experience levels, and great quality parts make for a sturdy rocket that is easy to put together.
CONs: If you can't stand cutting fin slots, you've got 8 on this one. I dig doing it but some folks don't.
Finishing:
I ordered my Samurai from a distributor/vendor rather than from Binder directly. This was about the time that Binder
Design switched to a new website and/or upgraded their original site. That said, all of the pictures that I'd seen of
the Samurai were of a red and black rocket with a lot of decals. When my kit arrived, it had one decal that was simply
the word "SAMURAI" in block white lettering. I emailed Mike Fisher and he explained that the rocket I had in
mind had the "advanced decal package" that was not advertised on his old site but would be on his new one. I
wanted it. I ordered that package and asked if I could get it in silver rather than the red I had seen before. I'm so
glad that I did.
The "advanced package" includes 24 cut vinyl decals for the booster and fins plus a sweet "SAMURAI" decal in a very appropriate "Asian" font for the payload. Too sweet. Going with the silver just made everything stand out. Black booster with silver decals. Silver payload with black decals. The chrome wrap on my rocket is something I added myself although a chrome wrap is pictured on a lot of Binder Design rockets. Mike explained that the chrome decal gets scratched too easily and has been dropped. I like the look of it so I put one on myself.
It should be noted that the "advanced decal package" is now directly available on Binder Design's website in any color that they have. You get to pick at the time of order!
PROs: The suggested two color scheme is easily achievable with standard spray paints and no crazy masking because of the construction of the rocket. The advanced decal package sets the rocket apart from any other--it just looks fast and mean lounging in the basement, waiting on the flight line, or sitting on the pad. What a sweet looking bird.
CONs: If you do go with the advanced decal package, you've got 24+ cut vinyl decals to apply. Again, patience and tedium. I dig it, some don't.
Construction Rating: 5 out of 5
Flight:
My first planned flight(s) for the Samurai were rained out, so naturally I was very excited to get to fly it at the
next month's club launch. I couldn't decide what to fly it on though. After completely finishing and weighing my rocket
in flight ready configuration (minus motor), I ran all the sims on RockSim and figured that just about any load for the
AT 38/600 case would be ideal.
When I arrived at the club launch, I found that Wildman's (Tim Lehr, our on-site vendor) had received a new AT shipment that included the (relatively) new "black max" reloads for the 38mm line. When I saw the box of I305FJ reload kits, I had to have one. FJ means gray/black smoke and I've got a silver/black rocket, so I decided to stay with the theme and go for it. The I305 was assembled and loaded in no time, and the Samurai was on the pads.
Boost was nice, if not a shade wobbly. There was a slight spin on the way up, but I get that a lot with split fin designs. I'm thinking it is builder/flier error (due to fin misalignment down at the nth degree.) Sweet whistle on the way up.
On the I305, the smoke and boost were super impressive. At apogee, the Samurai laid over, separated smoothly, and drifted down on that 45" chute. Mine landed precariously on some power lines but that wasn't that big of a deal. I got it all back with no electrocutions or anything. Nice, nice flight.
The second flight was the next day (our club does 2-day weekend launches). This time I went with the I366R-M, also for the 38/600 case. Much snappier boost on the 5 grain Redline--no wobble at all--but still the spin (surely it's my fault) and that killer whistle. Deployment seemed a shade early for me. We'll call it "deployment at apogee, nose up" but an otherwise perfect and nominal flight.
PROs: I was complimented on this rocket before it flew, after it flew, and while it sat on the flight line. Gotta love the whistle and any rocket that flies this good.
CONs: None.
Recovery:
The provided Top Flight parachute is very nice. The delay selections on my flights were spot on and deployment was
nice and gentle. I used a Sunward Nomex®
parachute protector and everything worked out great.
PROs: My flights recovered perfectly with acceptable drift and no damage.
CONs: Can't think of any!
Flight Rating: 5 out of 5
Summary:
The Samurai is yet another solid and stunning offering from Binder Design. The rocket has excellent styling and is a
real attention grabber at the launch. The design is expandable for even more versatility--the addition of an
electronics bay (available from Binder Design) would easily convert this into a very capable dual-deploy rocket for the
experienced flyer. The standard 38mm mount gives some nice power options for the high-powered (Level 1/Level 2) sport
flier. Based on my flight experience I am confident that it will easily handle the 38mm J motors, including the big 9
grain AT reloads (although a longer delay would probably be better for those.) The optional 54mm mount would provide
even more punch for those that want it. This rocket has been a part of the Binder Design stable for some time now, and
I highly recommend it anyone looking for a stylish sport rocket to add to their high-powered fleet!
Overall Rating: 5 out of 5
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