I can't watch the video and I am assuming they are using a fairly large piece of pipe and something similar to a manhole cover. The gun overall is the proverbial "mine sized chamber" with a low mass and basically zero friction ammo in an extremely short barrel.
Mr.Tallahassee wrote:Here's the thing, all chamber sizes burn at the same rate but the amount that they have to burn changes.
False. Chambers burn at rates that are a function of the size of the chamber. A larger chamber takes longer to burn than does a small one.
The percentage of fuel burned per second changes, not the rate.
What exactly do you think "rate" means. Burn rate is d(fuel)/d(time).
Adding the mesh also does not change the volume by that much and more volume doesn't necessarily mean more power.
But less volume rarely means more power.
The burn rate and the amount of energy in the fuel are what matter most.
Yes the burn rate is key, but adding mesh to a standard size chamber is unlikely to change the burn rate, indeed it'll probably slow it down. (Google "Davy lamp" for what metal mesh does to a flame front). A fan will do the same thing with much less loss of heat.
As to thermal losses, that's negligible.
Says who? A typical spud gun is about 10% efficient. At a CB of 0.8 the spud leaves the muzzle at about the time the pressure in the chamber drops to zero (gauge). Where do you think the other 90% of the energy goes?
MythBusters actually proved the theory by the fact that a proper mix did not blow off the scaled man hole covers without the debris causing turbulence. It's well worth the shot. I intend to test this theory when I can get the materials I need.
They proved the theory in a system that is not similar to a spudgun. The closest similar thing is Dave's "gun-o-god". Dave doesn't have debri in the gun and wouldn't even consider it. A burst disk does the job much better. At 1X, no burst disk, or debris, is needed.