The cannon will operate using compressed air and propane at a mixture of 4x.
Ideas, comments all welcome please.

If it was made from PVC it would probably explode...qwerty* wrote: but why did you decide to make this cannon all metal?
Actually, that's exactly what he is doing, hooking it up to propane AND air.qwerty* wrote: I really admire that you are keeping it original and making a combustion cannon rather than rigging it up to propane or air!
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
A few words on the subject:qwerty* wrote:If I build it with an extra long barrel will I have increased accuracy?
a while ago I wrote:Long barrels are associated with long range accuracy because a long barrel usually means high velocity and this results in a flatter trajectory. The projectile gets to the target quicker and therefore has less time to be affected by gravity, wind and other environmental factors which have to be compensated for.
The other side of the coin however is that with a longer barrel, there's more time in between you pulling the trigger and the projectile leaving the muzzle, so any movement during that time is more likely to have a negative effect on your accuracy.
In short, the ideal in terms of accuracy is to achieve as high a velocity as possible from as short a barrel as possible.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
That really sounds good. My only concern is that before the piston's o-ring is slammed back, some fuel will find its way inside and may possibly ignite despite being sealed off with the o-ring. I mean, even if it does, the cannon will just either not shoot or will shoot poorly. So not a huge deal anyway as it can always be tweaked.Technician1002 wrote:The configuration would be a small tube from the back of the pilot to the rear of the cannon. To prevent fuel in the pilot area, the charging would be in 3 steps.
1 add some air to set the piston and initial chamber pressure to hold it in place. The piston can have a small leak to enable this. By using floating o rings, in one direction it could seal normally. In the other direction, some intentional damage to one of the o ring groove side walls will provide the leakage path needed to make this work as a check valve.
2 add the fuel charge either directly into the chamber or through the pilot. This is your full metered charge.
3 add air up to the operating pressure through the pilot. This will purge the pilot of fuel.
With the chamber at pressure, when fired the piston will have a high pressure gas shock to arrest the piston. With a proper size tube from the pilot to the rear, high flow will not be possible to feed a pop off valve. No worries, the tube will act as a secondary buffer and restriction to flow so the combination will act as a dashpot. The valve will remain open as long as the chamber pressure is above the original pre fire pressure and close as the chamber pressure drops. A pop off on the pilot can be added if desired to reduce the pressure the valve closes, but I don't think it would be fast enough to make much difference. The main disadvantage to a pop off on the pilot would be an accidental discharge while bringing it up to pressure.
Also, longer barreled guns tend to have a longer sight radius, which allows the user to use iron sights more effectively. A longer barrel has a lower resonate frequency, and so deflects more during the shot. If the barrel is tuned, that should help make inconsistent velocity less of a factor (low velocity projectiles would be released with the muzzle deflected further "up" than a higher velocity projectile. Longer barrels do that more.jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:A few words on the subject:qwerty* wrote:If I build it with an extra long barrel will I have increased accuracy?
a while ago I wrote:Long barrels are associated with long range accuracy because a long barrel usually means high velocity and this results in a flatter trajectory. The projectile gets to the target quicker and therefore has less time to be affected by gravity, wind and other environmental factors which have to be compensated for.
The other side of the coin however is that with a longer barrel, there's more time in between you pulling the trigger and the projectile leaving the muzzle, so any movement during that time is more likely to have a negative effect on your accuracy.
In short, the ideal in terms of accuracy is to achieve as high a velocity as possible from as short a barrel as possible.
POLAND_SPUD wrote:even if there was no link I'd know it's a bot because of female name
The chamber being 16" long will leave a lot of unsupported material extending beyond the lathe chuck jaws. Also, how do you plan to bore the inside of the chamber? The bore is 16" deep. Have you devised a plan to make such an extremely deep bore? Even boring from both ends will require deep boring.Moonbogg wrote: Ideas, comments all welcome please.
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