Airburst Paint Grenades
Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2008 10:39 pm
You read the title, and you know why you're reading this.
If you don't know what a paint grenade is, its nothing explosive. These 'grenades' are merely small sections of surgical tubing with one end tied off which are filled with some paint-like substance of your choice and sealed by a washer, coupling, or other such device to hold the open end pinched shut until an impact knocks it loose. Normally to use one you pull out the hopefully existent safety pin, loosen up the washer or washer-substitute, and lob it at whatever you want to mark-up, and upon hitting something the washer pops off, leaving the surgical tubing to spin like crazy and spray whatever you filled it with everywhere. Its a good, cheap, and for-the-most-part effective and ultimately safe grenade, without any rule-breaking explosives or expensive bb-costs. However, these devices are severely limited by their finickiness of triggering and achieving of the desired spinning effect, and more than once have I thrown one just to have it pop.
Seeing as BBMG's cover the heavy direct-fire aspect of our home-built airsoft arsenals more than adequately, I've been pondering indirect artillery-support, and I've come up with this. Introducing the Airburst Paint Grenade, or APG for that comfortably familiar explosives zing. Instead of being limited to hard surfaces to trigger paint grenades and that inevitable risk of hitting a person directly, I implemented an anchored ripcord much like SEAKING's airburst design which will at a certain distance yank off that washer and send an alive and spraying grenade over the heads of your adversaries. So far I've successfully tested the concept by tying off the end of the string to a tree and throwing the grenade, so I've taken the liberty of consolidating the ammo and the cord in a removable shell. I've yet to actually build the cannon to accept the shells and fire one for real, but the concept is sound and I see no reason why it won't work.

Here's the whole shell, and my dog. The side with the oh-so-aesthetically-pleasing electrical tape is the muzzle, and the other side will have the threading to use in a cannon. I didn't want any seams in the inner barrel to interfere with the fragile nature of the grenades so I ditched an attached barrel altogether, and will for now settle with threading each shell on and off - its not as though that takes that long either.

This is a grenade filled with water which for now works for testing.

Heres the lockwasher I'm using as the release and the end of the string tied to it. The paperclip is a safety which I will remove before loading the shell.

This is the shell from down the muzzle, notice the string down to the grenade.

The front end of the shell, with the rubberband holding on the cord until its ready to fire. Ideally it should unwind nice and neatly off of the pipe until the tape rips the washer off.

Finally the back of the shell, where I will attack the coupler to the cannon.
This is a work in progress and by no means fully-exploited in any way, so expect an actual cannon to fire these things to come your way. Feel free to copy and expand upon this all you want, I just like the military feel of the word "AGP".
Edit 12/08 - Grammar
Updates will follow.
If you don't know what a paint grenade is, its nothing explosive. These 'grenades' are merely small sections of surgical tubing with one end tied off which are filled with some paint-like substance of your choice and sealed by a washer, coupling, or other such device to hold the open end pinched shut until an impact knocks it loose. Normally to use one you pull out the hopefully existent safety pin, loosen up the washer or washer-substitute, and lob it at whatever you want to mark-up, and upon hitting something the washer pops off, leaving the surgical tubing to spin like crazy and spray whatever you filled it with everywhere. Its a good, cheap, and for-the-most-part effective and ultimately safe grenade, without any rule-breaking explosives or expensive bb-costs. However, these devices are severely limited by their finickiness of triggering and achieving of the desired spinning effect, and more than once have I thrown one just to have it pop.
Seeing as BBMG's cover the heavy direct-fire aspect of our home-built airsoft arsenals more than adequately, I've been pondering indirect artillery-support, and I've come up with this. Introducing the Airburst Paint Grenade, or APG for that comfortably familiar explosives zing. Instead of being limited to hard surfaces to trigger paint grenades and that inevitable risk of hitting a person directly, I implemented an anchored ripcord much like SEAKING's airburst design which will at a certain distance yank off that washer and send an alive and spraying grenade over the heads of your adversaries. So far I've successfully tested the concept by tying off the end of the string to a tree and throwing the grenade, so I've taken the liberty of consolidating the ammo and the cord in a removable shell. I've yet to actually build the cannon to accept the shells and fire one for real, but the concept is sound and I see no reason why it won't work.

Here's the whole shell, and my dog. The side with the oh-so-aesthetically-pleasing electrical tape is the muzzle, and the other side will have the threading to use in a cannon. I didn't want any seams in the inner barrel to interfere with the fragile nature of the grenades so I ditched an attached barrel altogether, and will for now settle with threading each shell on and off - its not as though that takes that long either.

This is a grenade filled with water which for now works for testing.

Heres the lockwasher I'm using as the release and the end of the string tied to it. The paperclip is a safety which I will remove before loading the shell.

This is the shell from down the muzzle, notice the string down to the grenade.

The front end of the shell, with the rubberband holding on the cord until its ready to fire. Ideally it should unwind nice and neatly off of the pipe until the tape rips the washer off.

Finally the back of the shell, where I will attack the coupler to the cannon.
This is a work in progress and by no means fully-exploited in any way, so expect an actual cannon to fire these things to come your way. Feel free to copy and expand upon this all you want, I just like the military feel of the word "AGP".
Edit 12/08 - Grammar
Updates will follow.