X-Git-Url: https://git.gag.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=bdale%2Fblog%2Fposts%2FTeleMetrum_v0.2_First_Test_Flight.mdwn;h=bea90ac0ebf2c823bd3b68cbb450e7b3cbbf38a2;hb=cc5e14388b31e01560f14c83b7dc5ddebab97b1c;hp=f0b393e94be250309636da63cd846c512b732ff8;hpb=5aff00e3392b6f3a829807902ac7b9ff43b91551;p=web%2Fgag.com diff --git a/bdale/blog/posts/TeleMetrum_v0.2_First_Test_Flight.mdwn b/bdale/blog/posts/TeleMetrum_v0.2_First_Test_Flight.mdwn index f0b393e..bea90ac 100644 --- a/bdale/blog/posts/TeleMetrum_v0.2_First_Test_Flight.mdwn +++ b/bdale/blog/posts/TeleMetrum_v0.2_First_Test_Flight.mdwn @@ -38,7 +38,10 @@ And found the rocket within about 20 feet! That was well within the window of position uncertainty my hand-held GPS was reporting at the time. Things just don't get much better than that! We picked up the rocket, and returned to the flight line only a few minutes after leaving it. After dumping the data from -the board's on-board memory, I quickly generated the usual plots. +the board's on-board memory, I quickly generated the usual plots, along with +a [kml file](/bdale/blog/images/2010-02-13-serial-051-flight-002.kml) that +can be viewed in [Google Earth](http://earth.google.com/). + [[!img /bdale/blog/images/gspot-ars.png]] The rocket reached 1881 meters apogee, or around 6173 feet, and the maximum