Two Orbits valves on one air chamber: fratricide?
Posted: Wed Sep 28, 2011 10:17 pm
Hi all-
New poster here, and I really believe I have tried to answer this question via the search function, so please be gentle with me.
I learned two things from that unfruitful approach:
1) This place is frikkin huge.
2) There are an awful lot of brilliant but clearly psychotic engineers out there with far too much free, unsupervised time available. I may not leave home tomorrow for fear that an unexpectedly successful project by one of you puts a high-velocity cabbage through my forehead. From six miles away.
My humble question relates to the internal durability of the revered and abused Orbits 57461 sprinkler valve.
I have a project in mind that would involve two of these valves sharing an air chamber for what is effectively a double-barrelled nerf rocket launcher.
Imagine two of these valves at opposite ends of a shared air chamber. Perhaps at 100psi, The valves are outputting to two separate barrels.
I fire one barrel, mercilessly attacking my enemy. Insert evil chortle here.
What happens to the diaphragm and firing mechanism of the *other* valve, which now has it's intake side pressure violently dropped to 0 psi? How does the pilot area behave?
The chamber refills immediately from a regulated on-board air source, but did I just blow out a diaphragm? Or launch the other missile at a nearby referee? Or have a childish accident? Perhaps all three, which will make a great story someday?
If any of you successfully visualize my problem, A) good on you, and B) you clearly have worked with the mentally handicapped in the past. Good on you, too.
Thanks for any insights. If this has been discussed elsewhere around here, feel free to point me there and we can all move on to more fruitful topics like pumpkin chucking.
-Winger
New poster here, and I really believe I have tried to answer this question via the search function, so please be gentle with me.
I learned two things from that unfruitful approach:
1) This place is frikkin huge.
2) There are an awful lot of brilliant but clearly psychotic engineers out there with far too much free, unsupervised time available. I may not leave home tomorrow for fear that an unexpectedly successful project by one of you puts a high-velocity cabbage through my forehead. From six miles away.
My humble question relates to the internal durability of the revered and abused Orbits 57461 sprinkler valve.
I have a project in mind that would involve two of these valves sharing an air chamber for what is effectively a double-barrelled nerf rocket launcher.
Imagine two of these valves at opposite ends of a shared air chamber. Perhaps at 100psi, The valves are outputting to two separate barrels.
I fire one barrel, mercilessly attacking my enemy. Insert evil chortle here.
What happens to the diaphragm and firing mechanism of the *other* valve, which now has it's intake side pressure violently dropped to 0 psi? How does the pilot area behave?
The chamber refills immediately from a regulated on-board air source, but did I just blow out a diaphragm? Or launch the other missile at a nearby referee? Or have a childish accident? Perhaps all three, which will make a great story someday?
If any of you successfully visualize my problem, A) good on you, and B) you clearly have worked with the mentally handicapped in the past. Good on you, too.
Thanks for any insights. If this has been discussed elsewhere around here, feel free to point me there and we can all move on to more fruitful topics like pumpkin chucking.
-Winger