Hi,
Our team is making a T-Shirt cannon. How would we simulate the firing of the cannon (air compressed), through solidworks?
Hi,
Our team is making a T-Shirt cannon. How would we simulate the firing of the cannon (air compressed), through solidworks?
I don’t have a good answer to your actual question, but we have spent spare hours for three years on a t-shirt launcher, which we finally got out to the games this year. It really helped our recruiting! Here’s what we learned:
Hoses: we eventually wound up at a minimum of 3/4" diameter from the accumulator tank (about 3 gal, but probably didn’t need to be this large) to the barrel, including the solenoid valve.
Barrel: We started at 2-1/2", but found that 3" was better, especially at shooting those foam rubber footballs. It also made shooting shirts easier. Make sure that you have a tapered transition from your smallest size to the barrel size to reduce losses to turbulence.
Fit: We messed this one up. We built a base chassis that would have fit with AM rubber-tread wheels, but when we went to the much-larger pneumatic wheels purchased at Harbor Freight, we couldn’t fit through the door. We wound up rebuilding our robot during a four-week span of road games to be narrow enough to fit through our door without getting a couple of football players to carry it through sideways.
Rolling shirts: Some of our earlier attempts used duct tape to keep the shirts together through a launch, which makes the shirt rather less desirable in the stands. We developed a method that worked well for us and required nothing but the shirt itself to hold the package together: