Pneumatic cannon

Revision as of 01:46, 18 October 2005 by Boilingleadbath (talk | contribs)

Pneumatic launchers consist of five basic elements:

   * Compressed gas storage reservoir (chamber for short)
   * Filling valve (bicycle Schrader valves, quick-disconnects, etc.)
   * Main valve (ball valves, sprinkler valves, piston valves, quick-exhaust valves, and burst disks are the most common)
   * Barrel
   * Pressure gauge (for safety & repeatable launches)

In order to fire, the operator loads a projectile into the barrel, fills the chamber with a compressed gas (air compressors, hand pumps, and regulated bottled gas are common filling methods), and activates the main valve thus dumping the air in the chamber to the barrel.

The expansion of the compressed gas propels the projectile down the barrel. The barrel length determines the amount of energy transferred to the projectile and ultimately the velocity of the projectile.

High performance launchers use techniques such as modifying valves for faster opening times, using homemade valves, and maximizing the amount of airflow through the valve.