DIY Paper Rocket Launcher
06/02/2016
CLICK HERE to download directions on how to build your very own "stomp" rocket launcher. I created this for my friends at Asheville Makers.
CLICK HERE to download directions on how to build your very own "stomp" rocket launcher. I created this for my friends at Asheville Makers.
I was contacted recently by someone who read my article in MAKE magazine about the Adventure Tower I built and how it inspired him to build his own. He called his the "Tower of Power" and due to building regulations in his area, he had to keep his to a maximum height of 8 feet (mine was 16 feet tall). Check out more of his photos HERE.
CLICK HERE to view a photo album of the building process.
In the spring of 1983 I was finishing up my second year at Virginia Tech. When I entered college my intention was to become an engineer but that wasn't working out. After two years I still hadn't found a major that was right for me. I felt lost and frustrated.
I decided I needed to clear my head by taking on a big challenge and I narrowed it down to either hiking the Appalachian Trail or joining the Marines.
When I was deciding what to do I met a guy named Eddie, a local who owned property about 10 miles from campus. He must have sensed I was ready for a big challenge because he asked if I wanted to build a cabin on his property. His offer caught me off guard. I had zero experience building (save for the dog house I built while in high school). Building a cabin seemed like a huge undertaking.
I thought about it for one night and decided this was exactly what I needed.
Eddie agreed to guide me in the building process as he had experience with such things. I started clearing the land about a month before exams started and then moved all my belongings into storage just as classes ended. I set up camp next to the building site and began to work from sun up to sun down. My goal was to finish the cabin and move in before fall classes started (I moved in just 3 days before classes started).
I lived in the cabin from the summer of 1983 to fall of 1985. No rent. No phone bill. No electric bill. No water bill. No trash removal bill.
My agreement with Eddie was that I could live rent free while I was attending college. Once college was over I could start paying rent or move out.
Building the cabin and living in it was an incredible experience. I built the cabin for $1,100 and the investment paid off in more ways than I could ever have imagined.
The last time I visited the cabin was in 2000 and it was in good shape (dry and no noticeable rot). I have no idea if the cabin is still standing.
CLICK HERE to view a photo album of the building process.
Some of the lessons I learned / looking back:
(In no particular order)
Click on the link below to download the April 2010 MAKE Magazine article I wrote about this cabin build:
Download Make_vol_22_cabin_article