cool, plus the volume's marked so you can even see how much air you're putting inA-98 wrote:


cool, plus the volume's marked so you can even see how much air you're putting inA-98 wrote:

hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life

What thickness are you referring to?Wombat wrote:Polycarbonate has a tensile strength 9000 pounds per square inch, and can withstand sudden impacts of 5 foot-pounds per inch of thickness. That is why the manufacturers advertise the Bottles as "indestructible." The bottles aren't actually pressure rated though.

Now there is a goood ideapsycix wrote:Maybe test one until it bursts?
Where did you tap in at in the bottle or in the cap??noname wrote:I would highly advise against using one of those for a pneumatic chamber. I had one that got some nasty stuff crusted in the bottom of it, so I blew it up. I globbed epoxy all over the threads, screwed on the top really tightly, tapped a 20 foot hose into it, and pumped air in from the hose until it blew. It only took about 80 psi and shards flew all over my yard.
It'll work for a basic combustion, but I wouldn't go more high tech than that.
<a href="">DONT TAZE ME BRO.. DONT TAZE ME... AHHHH</a>Yea, that's definitely going to get you at least a tazer.
psycix wrote:Maybe test one until it bursts?
He did it!noname wrote:I would highly advise against using one of those for a pneumatic chamber. I had one that got some nasty stuff crusted in the bottom of it, so I blew it up. I globbed epoxy all over the threads, screwed on the top really tightly, tapped a 20 foot hose into it, and pumped air in from the hose until it blew. It only took about 80 psi and shards flew all over my yard.
It'll work for a basic combustion, but I wouldn't go more high tech than that.
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