Underwater gun
- Sticky_Tape
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I know that someone already thought of doing this but would this make it easyer to work? it would have water in the air chamber so that water would come out of the gun instead of air that would get rid of all the water to air physics right?
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You can tell how awesome a cannon is by the pressure used.
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/high-pr ... 12803.html
xnt rnm ne z ahtbg
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/high-pr ... 12803.html
xnt rnm ne z ahtbg
Maybe but not so much water. it would be very hard to pressurize the water, so you would be shooting it only from that little bit of air in the chamber.
- elitesniper
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- Sticky_Tape
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well that's just a conceptual diagram (thanks JSR) and youn could use pressures like 100psi on it.
You can tell how awesome a cannon is by the pressure used.
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/high-pr ... 12803.html
xnt rnm ne z ahtbg
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/high-pr ... 12803.html
xnt rnm ne z ahtbg
- jrrdw
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I think if you used a purge valve to bleed out all the air and filled the pressurized the storage chamber with nothing but water, it will work. I think you will get better results this way because the air will come out hit water and most if not all forward momentum will stop, making it a weak at best shot. Water on water should flow better improving power.
Thats my theory.
Thats my theory.
water can't be pressurized.
why not?
maybe you could have a pressure washer hooked up to the chamber to pressurize it. they usually pump like 2000psi.
- elitesniper
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The water can be pressurized. because it is under pressure.
Did the volume of water change? no, not significantly.
Therefore both statements are almost true.
Either way, pressurizing a liter of water to 2000 psi might store oh, about .1-1 joules of energy.
Did the volume of water change? no, not significantly.
Therefore both statements are almost true.
Either way, pressurizing a liter of water to 2000 psi might store oh, about .1-1 joules of energy.
water can't be pressurized, pressurized air is pushing the water. If you had a container with only water, and hooked a pump to it , the pump would break. that is why it is used in explosives, a container with water has a charge in it, when it ignites, it propells the water out with trmendous force, the force can't be absorbed. Same with shooting a spud gun at a coffee can full of water and a lid. the lid will pop off.
- Fnord
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Anything can be pressurized, but not everything can be compressed effectively. Water doesn't compress much until extreme forces are involved.
As to the design above, you won't get much power with allthat energy being wasted accelerating the water. A better idea would just be to stick a union on the end of the barrel and hold back the water with some foil.
You could make a homemade camlock system for faster disk changing.
As to the design above, you won't get much power with allthat energy being wasted accelerating the water. A better idea would just be to stick a union on the end of the barrel and hold back the water with some foil.
You could make a homemade camlock system for faster disk changing.

- elitesniper
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Ohh I guess I was wrong then, I think for a speargun design you should use a really strong spring held in by a sear type thingy, I think it would be more effective then air, for underwater shooting.
- Sticky_Tape
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Benstern is compleatly right. Did you ever hear of hydro static testing? Where a air chamber is filled with water and then air is pumped in so if the chamber exsplodes there is olny a small amount of energy stored even at say 6000psi. it's like JSR's pengun exsploding compared to a pop bottle exsploding there may be more pressure in the pengun but there will never be as much energy stored in the pengun as in a pop bottle.
1ml at 100psi compared to 2000ml at 100psi 2000ml has more energy.
1ml at 100psi compared to 2000ml at 100psi 2000ml has more energy.
You can tell how awesome a cannon is by the pressure used.
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/high-pr ... 12803.html
xnt rnm ne z ahtbg
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/high-pr ... 12803.html
xnt rnm ne z ahtbg