machined APFSDS projectiles

Potatoes last one shot, so build reusable! Discuss ammo designs and ideas. Tough to find cannon part or questions? Ask here!
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jackssmirkingrevenge
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Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:00 pm

I've been having a play with milled collars to turn small masonry nails into stable darts without any modification of the nail itself. In 6mm calibre, a simple airsoft BB serves as a sabot.

Some test firing at 15 metres shows that the projectile is stable and even fired from a low powered small 300 psi pneumatic, can still poke out of the far side of a 3/8" sheet of plywood.

This can be made relatively quickly and cheaply, anyone interested in purchasing such parts?

I'm open to bigger calibres of 1" or so, and would also provide the wadding.

edit: altered the thread title to reflect the content
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hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
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al-xg
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Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:43 pm

This can be made relatively quickly and cheaply, anyone interested in purchasing such parts?
Aren't you going to regret that ? :) Unless someone is shooting indoors they're probably going to need a fair quantity of these.


That said, I could use a couple of these when I go back home this Christmas 14mm OD , 4mm ID, I have some tungsten rods that need stabilising :D


You could quite easily make a mold tool for these. Two machined brass blocks with 4 pins through them and two brass bits to close it off. I'll make a CAD model.
Last edited by al-xg on Wed Nov 09, 2011 2:57 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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POLAND_SPUD
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Wed Nov 09, 2011 2:07 pm

ohh come on al-xg he's going to outsource production to the same guys who mass produce these
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to be honest that's how it should be made... mass produced and very cheap

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al-xg
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Wed Nov 09, 2011 2:44 pm

Image

Image

:roll: forgot to add a hole to inject the bloody plastic... Ah well, you get the idea.
Last edited by al-xg on Wed Nov 09, 2011 3:56 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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MrCrowley
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Wed Nov 09, 2011 2:49 pm

If only you could make them larger than 1.5" or so I'd be a keen bean :(
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mobile chernobyl
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Wed Nov 09, 2011 5:47 pm

I'd take some for 1.68" now, and some for 3" in almost a year :) Preferably with a pilot hole that can be bored out to the shooter's choosing!
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 1:53 am

al-xg wrote:Aren't you going to regret that ? :) Unless someone is shooting indoors they're probably going to need a fair quantity of these.
Indoors or not, these will shatter on impact fired from a reasonably performing launcher so they are single use anyway.

My idea though is not to make an "everyday" projectile but to have something in limited runs for those who want to edge out the performance of their launchers.

This is basically what I'm talking about:

Image

A launcher that could only dent the surface of the target with a fullbore lead projectile at point blank range easily penetrated with a saboted dart.
That said, I could use a couple of these when I go back home this Christmas 14mm OD , 4mm ID, I have some tungsten rods that need stabilising :D
I'm sure we could work something out :)
You could quite easily make a mold tool for these. Two machined brass blocks with 4 pins through them and two brass bits to close it off. I'll make a CAD model
Nice model (background and all :)) but currently I'm looking into silicone/RTV rubber options, they seem easier and cheaper...
to be honest that's how it should be made... mass produced and very cheap


I don't think I could guarantee enough customers to make this a commercially viable option, besides spudders tend to be a tight lot (or toight, depends on where they are :D)
If only you could make them larger than 1.5" or so I'd be a keen bean


This is the reality of the sherline chuck:

It has a clamping range of from 3/32" (2 mm) up to 1-1/2" (38 mm) diameter with the jaws in the normal position. With the jaws in the reversed position, work up to 2-3/4" (70 mm) can be gripped.

Reversing the jaws is a bit of a pain in the arse, but it can be done if it's worth my while.

The other limit (until I inevitably get riser blocks...) is the 1.88"/47mm swing over cross slide - though in reality, using the mill + rotary table, I could go higher - but the lathe is more convinient.

Need to look into the casting options as individually milling larger parts will lead to "miniboy syndrome"...
Preferably with a pilot hole that can be bored out to the shooter's choosing!


Exact barrel and nail dimensions would be required of course for custom jobs.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 12:56 pm

Some footage from behind a 0.4mm thick steel sheet target:

[youtube][/youtube]

First shot is a 1 gram lead pellet, second is a 0.67 gram nail dart.

Nail weighs 0.56g, fins weigh 0.11g, centre of gravity is 14mm from the nose, calculated centre of pressure is 15mm from the nose (25mm overall length)
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 1:06 pm

Nice penetration :)

Did you have something behind the steel plate to protect your camera? :D
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 1:10 pm

Labtecpower wrote:Did you have something behind the steel plate to protect your camera? :D
The only reason I was comfortable taking the shot ;)
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 1:15 pm

Forgot about that one..

Do you have a purpose for the pistol grip yet?

I might try to shoot a tungsten welding electrode from my hybrid.
Should do some damage :)
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 3:15 pm

JSR,

Thanks for the plug. In thinking about your fins, you have a milling machine I believe. If you can stand the material on end with maybe a 3 jaw chuck mounted in a rotary table, you could machine these fins with a long small diameter end mill. You can deviate away from the shape a ball end mill creates.

Lest you inject them under pressure, the mold will be a bit difficult to fill.

@al-xg, Nice rendering. Great design, hard to get tapered leading edges on the fins with that. Mike builds 4 sided molds that are locked together to create similar parts.

Concede it would be difficult to do on a manual machine.

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Thu Nov 10, 2011 3:44 pm

jsr i was thinking of converting my sherline to cnc then building a abs extruder head like on the makerbot. It would be interchangeable like the normal sherline head, could be a great way to make disposable things like this, just set it printing a set of 25 or so go watch some tv come back to shoot/sell.

I think Im going to get the board from gen 6 reprap and 4 steppers, that way I can have a double use cnc and low quality 3d printer.
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 9:24 pm

Labtecpower wrote:Do you have a purpose for the pistol grip yet?
It's waiting for a hybrid cartidge I'm happy with.
Thanks for the plug. In thinking about your fins, you have a milling machine I believe. If you can stand the material on end with maybe a 3 jaw chuck mounted in a rotary table, you could machine these fins with a long small diameter end mill. You can deviate away from the shape a ball end mill creates.
Thank you for the housing, expect a lot more dangerous shots in future :) In terms of different shapes that's pretty much what I didhere - the ball mill just makes it convenient for milled projectiles, if I do casting the shape will likely be a bit more elaborate and with moar fins :)
jsr i was thinking of converting my sherline to cnc then building a abs extruder head like on the makerbot . It would be interchangeable like the normal sherline head, could be a great way to make disposable things like this, just set it printing a set of 25 or so go watch some tv come back to shoot/sell.
Interesting combination, my plan is to go CNC within the next couple of years :) I was contemplating a 3D printer a few months ago, butthis really, really put me off...

Oh dear...
I think Im going to get the board from gen 6 reprap and 4 steppers, that way I can have a double use cnc and low quality 3d printer.
Does that mean you won't be using the Sherline CNC options?
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
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Thu Nov 10, 2011 9:56 pm

I think the 3d option will be treated more like a fun sherline accessory that only sees occasional use, while the main goal would be a cheap cnc mill. The way Im designing it the extruder it should be as simple as a sherline headstock to fit then simply plug 3 wires into the main board.

I know its not terribly accurate, but if its strong enough to mill afterwards, you can print oversize and mill important features down, much like a casting.

haha ya, little too expensive for a starving college student. I like the $100 board and $30 for 4 steppers, make my own mounts and couplings alot more than couple hundred maybe 1k for their kits.
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