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#1
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
Exactly: A tight seal is a requirement.
Also, how much air are you pushing? It needs to be about 4 times the volume (at least) of the PVC tube. Lastly, with 90 PSI, consider that the shock loads may cause the pipe to shatter. Two ways to make it safe, first encase the bottom 2/3 of the pipe in a larger pipe (no matter the size as long as it fits over the inner pipe), so the larger pipe will catch any shrapnel, OR second wrap pliable tape (like electrical, duct, or fiberglass packing tape) in a 1/4" to 3/8" layer around the lower 1/2 of the pipe, that'll slow down the shrapnel to nonlethal speeds. |
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#2
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
Quote:
here is a sketch. ![]() sorry about the size but there are 2 metal tanks that go through a valve and then to the barrel. ![]() single tank with pressure gauge ![]() the whole setup as it it now but that lone peice of pvc near the bottom is the tank inside its pvc casing through the valve to the barrel. ![]() the inside of the barrel and the bulkhead where the air comes out of (yes the barrel screws off makes it so much easier to carry around and put in more potato pellets)-vivek Last edited by vivek16 : 29-07-2007 at 10:48. Reason: adding pictures |
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#3
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
OK, so you're using a piston to push air from the big PVC pipe into the smaller PVC pipe. I agree there is little safety to be concerned about with this scheme, but think about what is pushing the potato.
One clippard tank isn't enough, you don't have enough volume to move the piston fast enough. Try using as many as you can get, but plumbed in parallel, not in series, such that the greatest volume of air can move. Here pressure is secondary to volume. If this isn't clear, I can explain further. Don |
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#4
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
Quote:
ok, i will try to get some more parts to get the second tank to be in parallel with the first one. i think i know how i can do this. Last edited by vivek16 : 29-07-2007 at 11:15. |
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#5
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
OK. Part of the problem is I can't see the sketch too well.
The air that enters the barrel is pressurized. That is the pressure I was writing about with safety and shock loads. As you continue, please consider what I wrote. PVC pipe might be rated for 150 PSI, but that's not a shock load - it might only withstand 1/2 that..... To launch a projectile, you need to get a lot of pressurized air behind it. If the barrel is 80 cubic inches, and you have 8 cubic inches of air (about what a clippard tank holds) at 90 PSI, releasing it into the barrel changes the pressure to 9 PSI. Do you see how that works? (The calculations are actually more complex, really resulting in less PSI, but the principle is the same). Now, if you release 80 cubic inches of 90 PSI air into the barrel, you end up with a total of 160 cubic inches of 45 PSI air. Start with 800 cubic inches of 90 PSI air and you get 880 cubic inches of about 80 PSI air... See the way this is going? OK, now the other half of this is getting the air into the barrrel quickly. If you use a 1/8" pipe to move the air into the barrel, it'll take 3 or 4 seconds to let the air in, and that's much too slow. Use 3/4" copper plumbing pipe, and the difference is dramatic. OK, that's enough for you to go on, let us know how far your half of a potato goes... Don |
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#6
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
the pvc i have is rated for 280 psi so i think ill be fine there. im using 1/4" tubing. i think ill cut the barrel down to 2/3rd size
-vivek |
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#7
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
PVC isn't rated for air though. Due to it's properties it can shatter into sharpnel and the reason OSHA won't allow it for air lines in shops. If the potato gets stuck or something else happens the pipe can explode like a hand grenade. Just something we're trying to make you aware of.
1/4" ID tubing will really restrict the volume, and more volume is what Don was hinting at for you. If you don't have anything bigger than 1/4" (I imagine you are using the same SMC polyurethane tubing we got in the KOP) and you don't want to buy anything bigger then try adding several feeds of the 1/4" tubing to your gun. This will help the tanks discharge faster which equals greater volume. ![]() |
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#8
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
After I was bored at a summer robotics meeting last year, I tried to make a pneumatic cannon out of only KoP items from this and past years. Even with 3/8" tubing, the volume of air rushing through the hose was barely enough to launch the plastic lid from a spray paint can about 20 feet. You need at least 3/4" ID pipe/tubing to make it work well.
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#9
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
well i am a little short on funds right now so i am waiting for our representative person from our sponsors where we have our workshop to reply if i can buy some parts from him. i think he is on vacation right now.
-vivek |
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#10
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Re: pneumatic potato gun i made
![]() ther'es your problem more power Grunt! Grunt! Grunt! you need lots of air quick. a valve that opens to high flow real fast and larger tubing. big hose= high flow. 90psi is nothing for a hand held gun i typically use co2 at about 850Psi. even with compressed air i go up around 250psi. |
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