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Firmware updatev1.2
Flight log uploadv1.1
Online USB Portalv1.0
Online USB WiFi configuratorv1.1
3D parts toolv1.0
Air hole calculatorv1.0
Altimeter Cloud APIv1.0
Altitude Predictorv1.0
Body Tube Strength Calculatorv1.0
Descent calculatorv1.0
Ejection Charge Calculatorv1.0
ESP web programmerv1.0
Fin Flutter Speed Calculatorv1.0
Firmware updatev1.2
Flight log uploadv1.1
Flight log verificationv1.1
Laser Cut Parts Designerv1.0
Online USB Portalv1.0
Online USB WiFi configuratorv1.1
Rail Exit Velocity Calculatorv1.0
Recovery Drift Calculatorv1.0
Visibility & Tracking Calculatorv1.0This predictor integrates the rocket's equation of motion in small time steps, starting at liftoff and continuing until the rocket decelerates to zero vertical velocity (apogee). At each step the net force on the rocket equals motor thrust minus drag minus gravity. Thrust follows the motor's published thrust curve so acceleration is highest near motor burnout when the rocket is lightest but still producing thrust. After burnout only drag and gravity act, and the rocket coasts up to apogee. Drag at each step is calculated from the standard equation ½ρv²CdA, where ρ is air density (reduced at altitude with a simple atmosphere model), v is instantaneous velocity, Cd is the drag coefficient and A is the rocket's cross-section area.
Cd is the single biggest source of error in any altitude prediction. Typical values: a well-finished low-power rocket with sanded fins and a smooth nose cone sits around 0.55 to 0.65. Minimum-diameter competition rockets can reach 0.35 to 0.45 with careful filleting and polishing. High-power rockets with thicker airfoil fins and larger launch lug or rail button hardware run 0.6 to 0.9. Rough finish, paint over-spray, exposed launch lugs and blunt fin leading edges all push Cd up. When in doubt, 0.6 is a reasonable default for most sport rockets.
In order of approximate impact for a typical flight: (1) total impulse of the motor, doubling impulse roughly doubles altitude for the same rocket. (2) Liftoff mass, weight the rocket accurately including recovery gear, altimeter, motor and adapter. (3) Drag coefficient, big swings in apogee come from a bad Cd estimate. (4) Body diameter, frontal area scales as radius squared. (5) Launch site altitude and air temperature, thinner air means less drag and higher apogee, so the same motor goes further at Black Rock (1400m) than it does at sea level.
The tool works across the full range of amateur rocketry: low power (motor classes A through D, apogees from 30m to about 300m), mid power (E, F, G, apogees typically 100m to 700m), and high-power (H onwards, apogees from a few hundred metres to tens of kilometres for advanced projects). Multi-stage rockets with separate booster motors need a separate prediction for each stage using the post-burnout velocity of the previous stage as the new starting condition; this tool handles single-stage flights directly.
Typical real-flight altitudes land within 5 to 15% of the predicted value when inputs are accurate. Underprediction usually means the real Cd is lower than estimated (smoother finish, smaller launch hardware); overprediction usually means the real Cd is higher (rougher surface, exposed launch lugs) or that the rocket flew off-vertical losing altitude to lateral velocity. For dedicated competition flights or when hitting exact altitude targets matters, full-featured simulators like OpenRocket or RockSim include aerodynamic stability modelling that this quick predictor does not.
How accurate is it? Typically within 5-15% of actual flight altitude with accurate inputs.
What Cd should I use? 0.55-0.65 for sport rockets; 0.35-0.45 for minimum-diameter competition rockets; 0.6-0.9 for high-power with larger hardware.
Does it account for wind? No; this predictor calculates vertical apogee only. Use the drift calculator for lateral distance.
What inputs do I need? Motor thrust curve, liftoff mass, drag coefficient, body tube diameter. Launch altitude and temperature refine the result.
Are apogee and maximum altitude the same? Yes, apogee is the peak of the flight where vertical velocity reaches zero.