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northendchopper 02-04-2004 16:00

potato cannon
 
ok all you people out there who think you have the best cannon out there. we (some people from 131) built a 11 feet long, 5 feet wide beast. it uses compresed air and shooots plastic containers full of peanutbutter (or big potatos) a picture will be comming soon, till then what do the rest of you guys have

Koko Ed 02-04-2004 17:19

Re: potato cannon
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by northendchopper
ok all you people out there who think you have the best cannon out there. we (some people from 131) built a 11 feet long, 5 feet wide beast. it uses compresed air and shooots plastic containers full of peanutbutter (or big potatos) a picture will be comming soon, till then what do the rest of you guys have

We just use a slingshot to fire t-shirts up into the stands. A little less dangerous and alot less likely to cause lawsuits. ;)

Jay H 237 02-04-2004 18:10

Re: potato cannon
 
5 feet wide! As long as you don't shoot garbage cans or 55 gallon drums of peanut butter out of it. :ahh:

Jeff Rodriguez 02-04-2004 19:18

Re: potato cannon
 
Do you mean ones that can be used at events, or just ones we have?

Me and my friends built a few. They're about 4' long. 3'x2" PVC barrel and a 1'x4"? combustion chamber. That's right combustion. The back screews off, you spray something flammable in the combustion chamber, close it up quick, and pull the trigger (a grill spark lighter). We shot potatoes about 2 football fields, and apples a little farther (they're jucier and slide better).

it's very similar to this one
http://spudtech.com/images/products/camo1.jpg

northendchopper 02-04-2004 21:34

Re: potato cannon
 
it is 5 feet wide in the sence that we have 11 feet of barrel, 5 feet of fittings and then 11 feet of acum. it takes the shape of a U...i am purly talking about for your own fun. i wouldent want to know the damage caused by one of these in a stadium

Clark Gilbert 03-04-2004 00:11

Re: potato cannon
 
Back in 2000 and 2001 my brother and a buddy of mine built one with all the money we could gather. It was pure luck that we didn't blow ourselves up with the thing. It was about 15 ft long and the biggest chamber diameter was about 8 in. Pure flammable propellant and a grill lighter!!!! (Got the gas chamber to glow orange more than once, and even blew the threads off one of these.) You should have seen the look on the check out clerks face when she saw 3; 16 year olds buy 4 bottles of diesel engine starter (love the ether).

We did quite a few trials with it and it worked great...heck we actually shook the windows on his back porch once. I wish I had a picture of this beast, but since then my friend has moved to TN and he is now attending Georgia Tech. Infact, I believe it's still in his grandparents garage.

I know the technokats have an air powered canon this year. I've seen it in use a few times and it's pretty cool. You might keep an eye out for them in Atlanta because I know they had it out in Chicago.

:)

Ian W. 03-04-2004 01:09

Re: potato cannon
 
I have a smallish potato cannon, combustion. Doesn't really have the right ratios, made it before I knew how to do it right.

Planning on "borrowing" a few solenoids from robotics in a few weeks to make me a pneumatic one, if I can. I know all the crazy formulas now, so I should be able to get it to work a lot better.

Wetzel 03-04-2004 01:39

Re: potato cannon
 
We have a radish cannon that is about a foot and a half long, and shoots baby carrots real nice. We also have a few 6 foot long 1.5" diameter tube 3" chamber with grill sparker cannons.

I recomend skipping potatos down a stream or across a lake. :D

A warning. The PVC will get very brittle when it is cold. If you keep it un heated, take it inside and warm it up before firing it at 30F. We shattered one firing it cold. I was surprised noone got hurt by shrapnel.


Wetzel

sirbleedsalot 03-04-2004 12:51

Re: potato cannon
 
A friend of mine made a steel potato cannon that uses old gunpowder as the fuel.

Jimbo5051 07-02-2006 09:21

Re: potato cannon
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ian W.
I have a smallish potato cannon, combustion. Doesn't really have the right ratios, made it before I knew how to do it right.

Planning on "borrowing" a few solenoids from robotics in a few weeks to make me a pneumatic one, if I can. I know all the crazy formulas now, so I should be able to get it to work a lot better.

I do not think that you should "borrow" things without asking your mentors. You should just save up to order your own solenoids. Then you could not be arrested. Muhahahahahhahah

mynameisbob 10-01-2009 23:20

Re: potato cannon
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimbo5051 (Post 447926)
I do not think that you should "borrow" things without asking your mentors. You should just save up to order your own solenoids. Then you could not be arrested. Muhahahahahhahah

My mentors let me borrow a couple solenoids to make and air cannon, but that project is on hold until the end of build session.

NorviewsVeteran 10-01-2009 23:43

Re: potato cannon
 
The first one i made is about 7 feet long, and has a total of... 7 pieces of PVC. And its painted camo.

The second one is under 3' long but you can fire it every 20 seconds as long as you don't run out of crab apples.

Beener 20-04-2009 18:55

Re: potato cannon
 
How about this?


JLipinski 28-04-2009 22:25

Re: potato cannon
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Beener (Post 852460)
How about this? (Pic of about the most intense thing to hit the internet since Wikipedia

You, I believe, win. Got any more details on that? dimensions, muzzle velocity, max psi, range, ammunition? (plus any cool exploits with said machine?)

hipsterjr 16-12-2009 12:19

Re: potato cannon
 
umm Beener, epic win sir, epic win:eek:


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