jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:Looking forward to that buckshot round, be sure to film it!
I finally got the time to put the one inch barrel on the gun, and give it a try.
Here is the gun setup.
I like this setup. Now I may spend the rest of the winter making it look better.
Maybe an imitation of a "district 9" gun. Maybe steampunk. Who knows.
~~~~~~~
Here are the first two rounds that I tried in the one inch barrel.
They both use pill bottles as sabots.
The one on the left is a single steel shot 'stuck' to the bottom of the sabot, using candle wax.
The one on the right is the buckshot style. With paper towel wadded into the pill bottle on top of the shot.
~~~~~~~
Here is the "buckshot" damage.
None of the steel shots went through the plywood.
Pretty much each, the same damage as was done by a single steel shot from the half inch barrel.
~~~~~~~
Here is the entry hole from the steel shot that was stuck to the sabot with wax.
If you look closely, you can see the impression made by the bottom of the pill bottle, when it hit the plywood.
The shot penetrated easily. It went through the plywood. Through a piece of pipe, about 4 feet behind that. Through a fiberglass window cover. Through the window. And through the side of a cabinet about 7 feet further on, after the window.
The pill bottle sabot was destroyed in both cases. I'll have to start making sabots from cardboard, or heavy paper, or whatever. Because I'll run out of pill bottles real quick.
I was actually aiming for the knot. So the gun is fairly accurate. There are no sights, so I was just roughly sighting down the barrel.
~~~~~~~
The next shot was a marble. This was wadded with paper towel. No sabot. Just wad the paper into the barrel, saving one small flap to lay the marble under. Once the marble is placed, stuff the whole thing to the bottom of the barrel with a ramrod. Ram it solid.
That is wadding a shot, not sabboting.
This pic shows the holes made by both the steel shot, and the marble.
The marble penetrated the plywood just as easly as the steel shot did.
Both made entry holes that are as clean as they could be, given the fact that the plywood is still wet.
~~~~~~~
After shooting the marble, (and recovering the wad. Making the wadding from a paper towel that is thick and is like a cloth rag. It is actually recoverable, and re-useable.), I wondered what would happen if I shot my ramrod, instead.
The ramrod is 42 inches of 3/4" wooden dowel.
I stuffed the wadding in the barrel again, and rammed he rod in there solidly.
It penetrated the plywood by more than 12 inches.
Here is the rod sticking out the front of the plywood..
Here is the rod, in a side-on view.
I aimed at the same knot, that the steel shot went through. But the rod flew off to the left, erratically.
There was a lot more kick to that shot, as well. LOL
In the side-on view, I took the pic from the right side of the plywood. The rod is actually through the left side of the plywood.
There was no apparent damage at all, to the rod itself.
~~~~~~~
And now, a pic of the rear of the plywood. Showing the damage from the steel shot, the marble, and with the rod still stuck through the plywood.
~~~~~~~
Bottom line, size does matter.
Bore size makes more difference, than barrel length.
And.. I really like this setup.
After the flood cleanup, I tried the gun again with the 3/4" barrel, but for some reason the valve had developed a leak. And not a tiny one, either. There was too much leakage, to put anything in the barrel. It would just blow back out, well before you were ready to take a shot.
I rebuilt the piston itself. Making sure that everything was flat and square. Now it seals to the barrel and stays that way.
I have noticed that even though it triggers just fine with the blowgun... (And all the above damage was done with the gun triggered by the blowgun.)
If I trigger it by leaving the ball valve open, and disconnecting the compressor quick-connect fitting, it seems to fire even harder.
So I may work on a different triggering system.
Sprinkler valve is out, because it is too bulky.