Gravity will pull it down before the rocket can reach the height where clouds form.
When it's on the pad , waiting to fly
Anywhere it is not windy or really dry.
Not very far at all.
I don't know of any way to test it except to fly it.
At the Ventura community park at Kimball.
Depends on the weight and streamlining of the rocket. i regularly get a B6 up to an estimated 1,500 feet.
The reason is very clear in the laws codes and regulations that keep safty for other things in the sky and in your launch zone both in the sky and on the ground. If you cant see where it is going then you cannot say that it is safe and will not cause damage to those around you. Flying Conditions. I will launch my model rocket only when the wind is less than 20 miles per hour. I will not launch my model rocket so it flies into clouds, near aircraft in flight, or in a manner that is hazardous to people or property. I will launch my high power rocket only when the wind is no more than 20 miles per hour and under conditions where the rocket will not fly into clouds or when a flight might be hazardous to people, property, or flying aircraft. Prior to launch, I will verify that no aircraft appear to have flight paths over the launch site.
The rocket never flies.
"Model rocket fuel" is basically in the form of single-shot engines. You could, I suppose, strap one to a stick and call it a "bottle rocket", but I don't think it would fly very well (and the engine would likely burn off the stick).
the rocket is pushing water downwards which means that the water pushes the rocket upwards very hard that it can overcome gravity and fly.
penguins cant fly, and chickens cant propperly fly!
No