Well sure it is...what else is there..?..Ragnarok wrote: - rather than just the rather "American" approach of bigger is better.

Well sure it is...what else is there..?..Ragnarok wrote: - rather than just the rather "American" approach of bigger is better.
I'm not positive, but I believe GGDT accounts for the air in front of the projectile in the model.biggsauce wrote: A 20 - 30' barrel has a considerable amount of air in front of the projectile, right? As it travels down the barrel, will there be a significant pressure buildup in front of the projectile? I say signifcant in that will it hurt performance?
It is my understanding that with a pneumatic, there will be no practical way of bursting the disk at a particular moment. You will have to continually push more gas into the chamber until the psi exceeds the strength of the burst disk. Hence, there is no traditional trigger. Folks have used mortars with a nail in the end of the projectile to puncture the disk, but that would be impractical given his need to have a tightly sealed projectile.koolaidman wrote:maybe im missing something and this is a noob suggestion, but, why not make it burst disk. I have no idea where youd get a 4" union or disks, but still itd be alot more efficient and cheaper.
More recent builds like DYI's SCTBDC (Slow Change, Triggered Burst Disc Cannon) do have triggers. Normally you have two sets of burst disks, with roughly half the intended chamber pressure between them, then you pressurize the chamber.willarddaniels wrote:It is my understanding that with a pneumatic, there will be no practical way of bursting the disk at a particular moment. You will have to continually push more gas into the chamber until the psi exceeds the strength of the burst disk. Hence, there is no traditional trigger.
Alternatively, you can impulsively ADD air to the space between the gaps. This way you're adding to the overall power when you trigger rather than subtract. A 12 gm CO2 cartridge should work very well as a trigger.Ragnarok wrote:Letting out the air from between the pair of burst disks will trigger the cannon, by increasing the pressure differential across the first disk until it breaks, which will then allow the full pressure to reach the second disk to burst that one too.
Now I like his idea, that's a good one. You'll just have to make sure that the inner seal breaks first, else the whole shot goes to heck.D_Hall wrote:Alternatively, you can impulsively ADD air to the space between the gaps. This way you're adding to the overall power when you trigger rather than subtract. A 12 gm CO2 cartridge should work very well as a trigger.Ragnarok wrote:Letting out the air from between the pair of burst disks will trigger the cannon, by increasing the pressure differential across the first disk until it breaks, which will then allow the full pressure to reach the second disk to burst that one too.
I have just today finished a 6mm coaxial with a ½" x 100cm chamber and a piston weighing >1g. At 450psi i truly believe that the soundbarrier was broken, but i have no way to tell for sure as i have no chronograph. The muzzleblast was a whole lot louder than at just at bit lower pressure, so i might have something, who knows.........
For the sound barrier, I'm now looking at a relatively small coaxial steel pneumatic. Something I could take to 300psi and above hopefully. Long barrel, light piston, and a quick pilot seem to be much more manageable for the mach 1 goal. Then theres the issue of a chronograph, which I may have found somebody that will let me borrow one, so we'll see.
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hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
So do I... blast, why did I not think of that?paaiyan wrote:Now I like his idea, that's a good one.
That's not actually possible - there is no combination where you add pressure to that void space and have the internal disk burst first - at least, where the outer disk would still break.You'll just have to make sure that the inner seal breaks first, else the whole shot goes to heck.