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#16
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
My students discovered that a shirt folded to be tight in the barrel shoots much farther than a loose one - although the tight shirt has more friction on the way out, it seals in the barrel much better.
Plastic tanks and barrels have always made me nervous (and I'm not an ME, and I'm sure this has been discussed elsewhere.) An industrial arts teacher at a school 668 is helping suggested copper. It's readily available, and tears rather than breaks up into shrapnel. Yes, it's also more expensive, but it takes a good shine! And it's a good way to prepare future homeowners to solder their water lines. ![]() |
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#17
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
Quote:
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#18
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
I would suggest just checking out this link if you want to make a relatively cheap T-shirt cannon (mostly out of PVC):
http://www.instructables.com/id/T-shirt-Cannon/?ALLSTEPS |
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#19
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
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#20
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
I will second this. Flying plastic = very dangerous projectiles in a crowd.
[=Daniel_LaFleur;1565142]Ummm, yeah. Do Not do this with PVC. Please.[/quote] |
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#21
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
Quote:
On the note of using PVC, generally speaking I agree that PVC should be avoided, especially for the accumulator (air storage), but to be honest there is far less pressure involved for a much shorter amount of time when using PVC for the barrel of a cannon. IMO if you're really that concerned about it, and can't get a suitable pressure-rated metal tube, build a small polycarbonate (or whatever) box around the bottom half of the barrel to catch shrapnel in the event of a failure. Lots of teams have built PVC t-shirt cannons and no one has died yet (that we know of). |
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#22
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Here is a site that has aluminum tanks, and high flow electric solenoids. http://www.hopposonline.com/3-gal-tank/
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#23
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
Quote:
Thanks! |
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#24
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
The PCM may not be able to supply enough current for the larger solenoid. You may need to use a victor or another speed controller to supply power to it, which is what we did. You could also probably use a small automotive relay.
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#25
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
Great Thank you! So then we will wire the solenoid though the Victor to the PDP then correct? Thanks again!
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#26
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
Yes, just treat it as a motor and run it at full power when you want it to open and no power when you want it closed.
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#27
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
We switch the solenoid valves on our air cannon with a 12 relay module similar to this one. Our first iteration used a spike relay, with one valve powered by M+ and the other by M-, with a common 0V (ground) return.
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#28
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Re: T-Shirt Cannon
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1> The pressure in the barrel is enough to fire the t-shirt, thus it is enough to fire PVC shards. 2> A box around the lower half of a PVC cannon might help. Are you willing to risk your students (or worse the public) should you be wrong? 3> As to your last line -- does someone need to die to get people to stop using PVC in gas pressure applications? As an engineer, you need to always understand how safe your product is. T-shirt cannons, by their very nature, will be used near the public. If the t-shirt can reach the crowd, so can shards from a sundered barrel. JM(NS)HO *gets off soapbox* |
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