1> We all use the same distance for the test, say 20 feet.
2> Target:
a. Plywood
b. Yellow pages
c. ?
Suggestions?
BoyntonStu
A penetration test "Standard"
My suggestion would be to NOT set up any spudding standards.
As far as penetration goes, there's far too much projectile/target matching for the results to mean anything serious.
I've got a project that's looking to punch holes through a half inch thick steel plate a quarter mile away - and I've explicitly designed the projectile to do that specific job. Try to test the same projectile on a different target*, and its results might be alright, but likely below average.
*Layered wood would stop it particularly well. It's expressly designed to become highly unstable after penetrating its target (or whatever it happens to have hit) as a way of minimising the risks of "over-penetration"
We can judge on an individual basis whether a shot is good, average or poor penetration using common sense and experience.
As far as penetration goes, there's far too much projectile/target matching for the results to mean anything serious.
I've got a project that's looking to punch holes through a half inch thick steel plate a quarter mile away - and I've explicitly designed the projectile to do that specific job. Try to test the same projectile on a different target*, and its results might be alright, but likely below average.
*Layered wood would stop it particularly well. It's expressly designed to become highly unstable after penetrating its target (or whatever it happens to have hit) as a way of minimising the risks of "over-penetration"
We can judge on an individual basis whether a shot is good, average or poor penetration using common sense and experience.
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?
- inonickname
- First Sergeant 4
- Posts: 2606
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2008 3:27 am
Plywood varies. As do phone/info books.
The projectile really has the biggest bearing on penetration.
The projectile really has the biggest bearing on penetration.
PimpAssasinG wrote:no im strong but you are a fat gay mother sucker that gets raped by black man for fun
- jackssmirkingrevenge
- Five Star General
- Posts: 26216
- Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2007 11:28 pm
- Has thanked: 576 times
- Been thanked: 347 times
When it comes to gauging performance, a chronograph and a good set of scales are much more useful tools, depth of penetration is as stated above highly subjective.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- Technician1002
- Captain
- Posts: 5189
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 11:10 am
A ream of paper is pretty consistent. If we standardize on a type such as 20 lb high speed photocopy, multipurpose, or ink jet printer paper. 5 or more reams of paper against a solid backstop such as a huge rock, wrecked car, sandbag pile, etc should be reasonable.boyntonstu wrote:1> We all use the same distance for the test, say 20 feet.
2> Target:
a. Plywood
b. Yellow pages
c. ?
Suggestions?
BoyntonStu
- Moonbogg
- Staff Sergeant 3
- Posts: 1736
- Joined: Mon Oct 13, 2008 10:20 pm
- Location: SoCal
- Has thanked: 165 times
- Been thanked: 102 times
Alright Ragnarok, thats a huge claim. Now its out and we are waiting for resultRagnarok wrote: I've got a project that's looking to punch holes through a half inch thick steel plate a quarter mile away - and I've explicitly designed the projectile to do that specific job.

@Moonbogg: That's the objective (along with achieving a respectable 5 shot group). There is no guarantee of meeting it - although I'd very much like to.
But, expect to be waiting a while. Neither the cannon nor anything else I'll need to build to do it is finished. Most importantly, it's also dependent on finding somewhere to do it. I'm not even going to invest the time or money into the projectiles (and let's face it, the target) until I have a confirmed location.
But, expect to be waiting a while. Neither the cannon nor anything else I'll need to build to do it is finished. Most importantly, it's also dependent on finding somewhere to do it. I'm not even going to invest the time or money into the projectiles (and let's face it, the target) until I have a confirmed location.
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?
- jackssmirkingrevenge
- Five Star General
- Posts: 26216
- Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2007 11:28 pm
- Has thanked: 576 times
- Been thanked: 347 times
Looking at the moon now, it would seem that an alien race of consierably larger proportions than us are into the hobby of "asteroiding"Moonbogg wrote:Just pull a NASA and shoot the moon.


hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
20 LB! dont you think that would cost quite alot? well it would in england i think 500 sheets of a4 costs about £8 and that weighs about 4 lb.A ream of paper is pretty consistent. If we standardize on a type such as 20 lb high speed photocopy, multipurpose, or ink jet printer paper. 5 or more reams of paper against a solid backstop such as a huge rock, wrecked car, sandbag pile, etc should be reasonable.
As for things to shoot, i have no idea maybe something like the milkbottle challenge but with coke cans.
I visit occasionally to make unrelated posts.
- Technician1002
- Captain
- Posts: 5189
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 11:10 am
The 20 lb in the USA is a reference to the thickness of the paper, not the weight of a sheet. Index cards are 110 lb, thin copy paper is 16 lb, presentation cover stock is 65 lb etc.qwerty wrote:20 LB! dont you think that would cost quite alot? well it would in england i think 500 sheets of a4 costs about £8 and that weighs about 4 lb.A ream of paper is pretty consistent. If we standardize on a type such as 20 lb high speed photocopy, multipurpose, or ink jet printer paper. 5 or more reams of paper against a solid backstop such as a huge rock, wrecked car, sandbag pile, etc should be reasonable.
As for things to shoot, i have no idea maybe something like the milkbottle challenge but with coke cans.
- velocity3x
- Corporal 4
- Posts: 828
- Joined: Fri Jun 05, 2009 3:09 pm
- Location: Yuma, Arizona
- Contact:
[quote="Ragnarok"]I've got a project that's looking to punch holes through a half inch thick steel plate a quarter mile away - and I've explicitly designed the projectile to do that specific job.
quote]
Surely this can not be a pneumatic launched projectile...can it? If so, wouldn't you be required to spend many, many thousands of dollars on machine shop services to produce a launcher that will produce that kind of excessive energy at 1/4 mile?
quote]
Surely this can not be a pneumatic launched projectile...can it? If so, wouldn't you be required to spend many, many thousands of dollars on machine shop services to produce a launcher that will produce that kind of excessive energy at 1/4 mile?
It will be pneumatically fired, from Project 3vo.velocity3x wrote:Surely this can not be a pneumatic launched projectile...can it?
There are two ways to get sufficient energy at that range. Start with a huge amount of energy, or lose as little of it as possible to drag. I'll personally be trying to get drag as low as possible.
There are also several ways to minimise the energy needed for the job of punching through the target. Unfortunately, these aren't necessarily the same things as will produce the best aerodynamics.
So, there is a sliding scale between a projectile which carries as much energy to the target as possible, and one that needs as little energy to pierce as possible. For any given range, there will prove to be a best compromise somewhere on that scale.
Alternatively, there's another option, where the projectile has a destructible nose which is of the best aerodynamic shape (and which is destroyed on impact), and under that a nose that presents the best penetration shape.
I've got a design for both ideas, and at some point, I'll need to do some tests on both to see which is of greater merit.
(While the destructible nose projectile will be "better", I need to decide if it's enough of an improvement to be worth the extra resources needed to build it.)
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?