Harvey Mudd鈥檚 MARC Team Successful at FAR Rocketry Competition
July 28, 2025Share story
The Mudd Amateur Rocketry Club (MARC) launched its most successful rocket to date, marking a milestone in the 无忧视频 student group鈥檚 multi-year journey toward competitive rocketry excellence. The rocket, Gladius III, soared to over 17,000 feet and returned fully intact, earning MARC third place on the competition leaderboard at the Friends of Amateur Rocketry (FAR) site in California鈥檚 Mojave Desert.
鈥淪eeing our rocket ignite, feeling the initial roar and flash of fire, that鈥檚 something everyone just needs to experience,鈥 says Drake Gonzales 鈥27, who helped with avionics and rocket assembly. 鈥淔AR was a great opportunity to bond with the team and fall even more in love with rocketry.鈥
The launch, held Sunday, June 8, was the culmination of months of design, fabrication and last-minute problem-solving by students across class years and disciplines. Spencer Michaelson 鈥28 described the experience as both technically challenging and emotionally intense: He had the 鈥渘erve-wracking honor of crawling beneath the fully vertical, fueled rocket to insert the ignitor, the final step before launch,鈥 he says.
Michaelson worked on structural design, motor assembly and water jetting components for Gladius III. He says, 鈥淎bout a minute after liftoff, when we saw the main chute deploy successfully, the entire team erupted into cheers and hugs, so loud that the staff had to ask us to quiet down for the next launch.鈥
Pierce Gruber 鈥25, structures lead, says Gladius III represented a 鈥渃omplete redesign鈥 after structural failures in previous years. 鈥淲e rebuilt everything from the fins to the epoxy bonding methods. There were moments I thought, 鈥楾here鈥檚 no way this thing will fly.鈥 But we came in the next day and figured it out.鈥
The rocket featured innovations like custom centering rings, epoxy optimization, a new avionics bay and an improvised GPS solution. 鈥淭o help us zero in on its exact position, we had mounted several tracking devices inside the rocket, including a $165 GPS tracker and a burner phone with the Life360 location-sharing app installed,鈥 says Nikolas Hall 鈥25, MARC鈥檚 outgoing president. 鈥淚ronically, the tracker didn鈥檛 work, and it was the cell phone that ultimately led us to the rocket.鈥
Jacob Fain 鈥26, associate structures lead, says the team 鈥減ulled together to finish building Gladius III just hours before launching. We solved a number of critical problems, which was a thrilling challenge that ultimately grew my confidence as an engineer.鈥

Other team members contributed across subsystems, from avionics and parachutes to structural design and documentation. Felix Peng 鈥28 helped assemble the rocket and its nose cone, Wilson Zambrano 鈥26 helped assemble the motor on-site, Rai Wandeler 鈥28 set up and ran the rocket鈥檚 avionics system, Ben Simpson 鈥28 designed its scientific payload and incoming MARC president Naomi Horiguchi 鈥26 led recovery system efforts and coordinated rocket assembly. Several members, including avionics lead Xiyuan (Amy) Liu 鈥26, were unable to attend the launch but worked on the rocket throughout the preceding year. Additional support for the team came from Machine Shop Manager Drew Price, Professor of Engineering Leah Mendelson, R. Michael Shanahan Professor of Chemistry and Associate Dean of Faculty Katherine Van Heuvelen and Administrative Coordinator Andrea Caldera. The rocket was funded by the HMC Shanahan Fund for student-directed projects.
鈥淲hen during those first few seconds Gladius III shot up in a perfect, straight line of smoke, all the work over the past four years was instantly worth it,鈥 says Gruber.