In a model rocket that uses engines, there is an engine mount. The engine mount is located inside the body tube in the bottom where the engine goes. It usually consists of a small tube, two rings that connect it to the body tube, and a metal bar to hold the engine in the tube. Its job is to house the engine and hold it in place for a flight.
glad to help,
Uujjee
thrust of the rocket engine
A cryogenic rocket engine
Saturn 5 rocket engine
A device that ignites the fuel & oxidizer mixture in the rocket engine when a "burn" is to begin.it lights the rocket.
keroscene
You wrap tape or a cardboard ring around the engine mount until it fits tightly in the fuselage tube.
A rocket engine is made up of many unique different parts. The components of one include a nozzle, engine casing, delay charge, propellant, engine mount, and ejection charge.
You use a Launch Lug, Parachute, Removable Solid Rocket Engine, Parachute Lines, Fins, Body Tubes, Nose Cone Payload (removable), Engine Mount (fixed), Shock cord, and Recovery Wadding.
thrust of the rocket engine
A cryogenic rocket engine
A liquid-fuel rocket or a liquid rocket is a rocket with an engine that uses propellants in liquid form.
Rocket engines obtain their thrust in accordance with Isaac Newton's third law, making the rocket a reaction engine. A rocket engine is simply a jet engine.
Rocket engine
rocket what? an engine?, need to know the year and engine size.
It's a small metal hook the length of the motor tube, fitted into the motor mount. This clips over the nozzle end to hold the engine in place when retro firing happens at the end of flight. If you didn't have this hook, the motor would blast out of the back of the rocket when it 'retroed'
Rocket Engine Test Facility was created in 1957.
yes, a rocket does have a engine. the engine is the horse power to a rocket that gets it to go... and keep going... and keep going. as long as it has a good engine then it would be a pretty long ride in to space.