The motor guide allows you to quickly find motors that will work for a rocket; see the help page for more info.
If you create a rocket, you can run the guide more easily in future as well as have more options.
Here are the 10 most recently created public rockets entered by other people you can try out.
| Name | Body Diam | Weight | MMT Diam | MMT Len | Owner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mega Godzilla Max (Vanderburn) | 4.00 in | 1,250 g | 38 mm | 10.00 in | David S. Kemp |
| Featherweight F1 | 29 mm | 200 g | 24 mm | 30.00 in | William Hanlon |
| Nike Smoke Interceptor | 5.50 in | 27.60 lb | 75 mm | 29.29 in | THOMAS MCCARTHY |
| Mega Der Red Max 3x29mm cluster | 4.00 in | 1,000 g | 29 mm | 10.00 in | David S. Kemp |
| KBW-BMS 3 inch School Rocket 34 inch Sustainer | 3.00 in | 21.0 oz | 29 mm | 10.00 in | Bob Knytych |
| School rocket (school bus) | 3.00 in | 710 g | 29 mm | 12.00 in | Bob Knytych |
| 4-29SS Loc-Precision Modular (4 Cluster) | 3.00 in | 1,200 g | 29 mm | 14.00 in | Gregory Robinson |
| 4-29SS Loc-Precision Modular (2 Cluster) | 3.00 in | 1,200 g | 29 mm | 14.00 in | Gregory Robinson |
| Interceptor H | 4.00 in | 4,072 g | 38 mm | 14.00 in | Christopher Jezewicz |
| Semroc Pro Mars Snooper | 4 mm | 28.0 oz | 29 mm | 17.00 in | Randy Boadway |
Search public rockets for more to try out.