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Rail exit velocity is the single most important pre-flight number after motor selection. It's the speed the rocket is travelling when it leaves the launch rail or rod, and it determines whether the fins have enough airflow to aerodynamically stabilise the rocket the instant it starts flying unguided. Too slow off the rail and even a light breeze can tip the rocket off-vertical, leading to weathercocking (the rocket turns into the wind), tumbling, or in the worst case an unstable ballistic flight. A minimum rail exit velocity of 15 to 20 m/s (50 to 65 ft/s) is widely accepted as the threshold for safe stability in typical conditions.
The rule of thumb is T/W of 5:1 minimum. That means the motor's average thrust must be at least 5x the rocket's weight (not mass, weight is mass times g). Below 5:1 the rocket accelerates too slowly off the rail; by the time it leaves, it hasn't reached adequate speed for stability. Competition or very calm conditions can sometimes permit 4:1 on a long rail. T/W below 3:1 is unsafe; the rocket struggles to clear the pad safely and can fall back if tilted by wind. Be realistic about mass, weight the rocket with motor, recovery gear, altimeter and everything else that flies.
The simplified calculation uses Newton's second law assuming constant average thrust and ignoring aerodynamic drag during the short rail transit: v = √(2aL) where net acceleration a = (F-mg)/m, L is rail length, F is average motor thrust, m is rocket mass and g is 9.81 m/s². More refined calculations integrate the motor thrust curve and subtract drag but the simplified form is accurate within 5-10% for typical sport and HPR launches. This calculator uses the simplified form and reports rail exit velocity, T/W ratio and a safe/marginal/unsafe rating.
Weathercocking is the rocket tilting into the wind because relative airspeed at an angle creates a restoring aerodynamic moment at the fins. Tilting is good, uncontrolled weathercocking is not. The key metric is the ratio of rail exit velocity to wind speed: at 5:1 the rocket barely weathercocks, at 2:1 it tips noticeably into the wind, at 1:1 it can go almost horizontal. For a 5 m/s wind, aim for at least 20 m/s rail exit. On windy days either use a longer rail or wait for less wind; most rocketry bodies set wind limits (typically 10 m/s / 20mph) above which launches are not allowed.
Typical choices: 1.2m (4ft) 1/4" rod for low power up to D motors; 1010 rail at 1.5-2m (5-6ft) for mid-power E-G flights; 1010 or 1515 rail at 2.4-3m (8-10ft) for high-power H+ flights; longer rails (up to 10m) for heavy HPR or low-T/W experimental designs. Match rail length to rocket size and motor class. If the calculator says rail exit velocity is marginal, try a longer rail first, doubling rail length increases exit velocity by 1.41x (√2).
What is minimum safe rail exit velocity? 15-20 m/s (50-65 ft/s) for typical conditions. Higher in strong wind.
What T/W ratio do I need? 5:1 minimum. 4:1 is marginal. Below 3:1 is unsafe.
How do I increase rail exit velocity? Longer rail, punchier motor (higher average thrust), reduce rocket mass. Longer rail is usually easiest.
Why does wind matter for rail speed? Low rail speed + wind = severe weathercocking and possible unstable flight.
What rail length for my rocket? 1.2m for low power; 1.5-2m for mid-power; 2.4-3m for HPR; longer for heavy or low-T/W rockets.