Difference between revisions of "Pneumatic air sources"

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(Gases)
 
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==Gases==
 
==Gases==
 
'''[[Acetylene]]'''
 
 
Advantages:
 
* Very powerful combustion pressure spikes
 
 
Disadvantages:
 
* Extremely unstable, will auto-ignite at pressues over 15 psi
 
* Pressure spikes are very rapid, and therefore can cause fatigue much more readily
 
* Safe to use in very few spudding applications
 
  
 
'''Air'''
 
'''Air'''
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Sources: Unless you have an on-site extraction plant, the only option is [[gas bottle]]s or electrolysis
 
Sources: Unless you have an on-site extraction plant, the only option is [[gas bottle]]s or electrolysis
  
'''Carbon Dioxide'''
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'''[http://www.spudfiles.com/spud_wiki/index.php/Co2 Carbon Dioxide]'''
  
 
Advantages:
 
Advantages:

Latest revision as of 15:04, 22 April 2009

This page lists some of the common sources of air pressure to power a pneumatic, and the advantages and disadvantages of each:

Gases

Air

Advantages:

  • It's price (completely free of course)
  • Global availability.
  • Inert

Disadvantages:

  • Limited performance approaching the sound barrier.

Performance of air is moderate. It is very uncommon for a air powered launcher to exceed the sound barrier, but not completely impossible. Most gases are compared against air as a benchmark Sources: If you want to use air, you'll either need a compressor, hand/foot pump or a High Pressure Air (HPA) tank

Helium

Advantages:

  • Exceptional performance
  • High speed of sound and particle speed
  • Inert

Disadvantages:

  • Costly
  • Will leak faster than any other gas
  • Helium regulators typically limited to 200 psi.

Performance is second only to Hydrogen. Sources: Unless you have an on-site extraction plant, the only option is gas bottles

MAPP

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

  • More expensive than propane

Nitrogen

Advantages:

  • Performance slightly better than air.
  • Option for high pressures.
  • Inert

Disadvantages:

  • Costly
  • Particle speed is not significantly more than that of air

Nitrogen is slightly more powerful than air for a given pressure, but nitrogen regulators are capable of very high pressures. Sources: Unless you have an on-site extraction plant, the only option is gas bottles

Hydrogen

Advantages:

  • Highest performance gas, in terms of particle speed

Disadvantages:

  • Costly.
  • Potential explosive risk.
  • Will leak fast.

Hydrogen is the most powerful gas that can be used in a pneumatic, but it has numerous risks associated with it. Sources: Unless you have an on-site extraction plant, the only option is gas bottles or electrolysis

Carbon Dioxide

Advantages:

  • Reasonably cheap
  • High pressure
  • Highest gas volume to bottle volume ratio
  • Inert

Disadvantages:

  • Low power due to high molar mass and high density
  • Very heavy cooling on decompression (can cause problems with PVC launchers)

CO2 is a very common bottled gas, but it's power is limited by it's high density. Sources: Gas bottles, CO2 cartridge

Propane

Advantages:

  • Reasonably cheap
  • High gas volume to bottle volume ratio
  • Readily available

Disadvantages:

  • Low power
  • Low pressure
  • Possible (if unlikely) fire risk

Propane is better known as a combustion cannon power source, but some pneumatics have used it as a gas. It's performance is low, because of it's high density and low pressures, but it is cheap and easily found. Sources: Gas bottles, either in large bulk tanks of several kilograms, or in small tanks of 0.5 - 1 lb.

Supplies

Compressor

Hand/Foot Pump

Gas bottles

CO2 cartridges