Quote:
Originally Posted by WarehouseCrew
Is your smooth sliding surface supported on the back side with curved aluminum flat stock? How rigid does this need to be (eg. does your sliding surface flex between support brackets)?
Does your last part of the shooter change the angle of the release (eg. looks like it slopes up at the end)? It looks like your Delrin (or other material) across the end of the shooter slopes down from the sliding surface towards the wheel? Is this because the disc when compressed climbs the outside sliding surface?
What area of the disc should contact what surface of the wheel? It looks like the bottom 1/2" in of disc edge is contacting below the center line (highest point) of the wheel. Is that correct?
What is the purpose of the plastic post just in front of the wheel?
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Yes, the smooth surface is supported by an aluminum wall on the back. We support it with L aluminum brackets. It needs to be pretty rigid. There can't be much flex at all
The only reason we angle it was to make sure the frisbee didn't curve on the flight pattern. When you increase the angle when it comes out, it doesn't curve as much when flying through the air. We are shooting full court so that is the reason we wanted that.
Think of a shotgun. The more accurate shotguns have a longer barrel to keep the bullet from moving much when it comes out. The is exactly what we are doing. That as a short barrel so the frisbee stays as straight as possible.