Is there any advantage/benefit of using a valved firing chamber behind the piston valve that is pressurized from a larger chamber instead of using a hammer valve for multiple shots?
Example here:
http://www.airgununiverse.net/community ... 135.0.html
BoyntonStu
2 valve metering vs hammer valve
Yes, i suppose there is. Using a sleeve valve to fill the gun and pilot it at the same time is a great way of making semi-auto guns but you need high pressure and a small chamber at for the QEV or piston valve.
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- inonickname
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There was a post very recently from someone showcasing a regulated hammer valve. Perhaps drop him a line.
In my opinion, and I have no idea why it isn't used in commercial airguns the two tank method is superior. Simply for the reason that it allows use of a faster valve with more flow, less restrictions and less turbulence. It's seen time over and over, we can obtain similar powers to commercial airguns with substantially lower pressures.
Commercial guns could definitely improve performance like this. There's plenty of more powerful valves than poppet/hammer valves out there.
Though a ball valve isn't the way to do it.
In my opinion, and I have no idea why it isn't used in commercial airguns the two tank method is superior. Simply for the reason that it allows use of a faster valve with more flow, less restrictions and less turbulence. It's seen time over and over, we can obtain similar powers to commercial airguns with substantially lower pressures.
Commercial guns could definitely improve performance like this. There's plenty of more powerful valves than poppet/hammer valves out there.
Though a ball valve isn't the way to do it.
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Oh, I'm familiar with how they work.inonickname wrote:There was a post very recently from someone showcasing a regulated hammer valve. Perhaps drop him a line.
But given I've yet to see much (if any) building of home-made regulators, I can't see many here going to the trouble of a regulated valve.
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?
- boyntonstu
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if we could design a 2 valve system that is integrated with the breech open/close motion, we would be half way to a repeater.Ragnarok wrote:Oh, I'm familiar with how they work.inonickname wrote:There was a post very recently from someone showcasing a regulated hammer valve. Perhaps drop him a line.
But given I've yet to see much (if any) building of home-made regulators, I can't see many here going to the trouble of a regulated valve.
(The next step would be magazine feed.)
Talking of which, what's happened with the community projects?boyntonstu wrote:if we could design a 2 valve system that is integrated with the breech open/close motion, we would be half way to a repeater
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?
- boyntonstu
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I dunno, wasn't a member then.Ragnarok wrote:Talking of which, what's happened with the community projects?boyntonstu wrote:if we could design a 2 valve system that is integrated with the breech open/close motion, we would be half way to a repeater
I try to share my ideas and ideas from other forums as best as i can.
How do we organize a community project?
BTW Here is a what if:
Each time we recharge the little chamber we add some volume by opening additional small cylinders similar to a revolver.
The extra volume may help keep the shots uniform in power.
edit; having rethought the above, this would be better;
A sliding/sealing piston that can be screwed into the already pressurized pre-chamber after each shot to compress the air up to a value that would produce the same power as the first shot.
- Technician1002
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I second the consistancy of a small firing chamber. I've been playing with the Marshmallow cannon with it hooked directly up to a low pressure regulator with the large barrel with the loose sabot. Cycle times are short. I don't bother to shut off the air for a shot due to the flow rate of the hose. It's ready for the next shot as fast as I can drop in the next golf ball, marshmallow or other projectile. A shuttle slide tied to the trigger could make it full semi auto. Each pull discharges it and retrives a round from the hopper. Each push drops the round into the barrel and closes the valve. A rapid pumping motion will provide rapid fire.
- POLAND_SPUD
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I think that people lost interest in itTalking of which, what's happened with the community projects?
the problem was that the final design was a compromise between different designs proposed by members... designs that they always wanted to build or dreamed of
but in the end there could be only one design... so no one was really interested in it
I think the idea was great but it won't work unless what I've mentioned earlier is taken into consideration
Children are the future
unless we stop them now
unless we stop them now
- boyntonstu
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How about adding a pressure gauge and a shock pump to make every shot even?Technician1002 wrote:I second the consistancy of a small firing chamber. I've been playing with the Marshmallow cannon with it hooked directly up to a low pressure regulator with the large barrel with the loose sabot. Cycle times are short. I don't bother to shut off the air for a shot due to the flow rate of the hose. It's ready for the next shot as fast as I can drop in the next golf ball, marshmallow or other projectile. A shuttle slide tied to the trigger could make it full semi auto. Each pull discharges it and retrives a round from the hopper. Each push drops the round into the barrel and closes the valve. A rapid pumping motion will provide rapid fire.
A hybrid if you will.
A pressurized main chamber + a built in shock pump to add pressure to the small chamber.
if you are out in the field, the shock pump could do it all.
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iknowmy3tables
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hammer valves are a little more friendly than 2 part systems where one might accidentally open both valves and they allow for an actual finger trigger, but they are harder to make. 2 part systems are just easier to make, and since an extremely large hammer valve may be impossible to open 2 part systems are better for that
1.use a regulator valve
2.use a gas from a liquid source ex: green gas/propane, butane
3.use air from a source with a volume under a fairy consistent mechanical compression ex: a thick rubber blatter, you can also use a piston driven by an high pressure air cylinder with a considerable about of expansion volume
well you're adding another step to the process, and no one likes that, I'd just get bored and just leave it that the largest volume. I think regulating the input is the better way to go and the methods of doing that are,boyntonstu wrote: BTW Here is a what if:
Each time we recharge the little chamber we add some volume by opening additional small cylinders similar to a revolver.
The extra volume may help keep the shots uniform in power.
edit; having rethought the above, this would be better;
A sliding/sealing piston that can be screwed into the already pressurized pre-chamber after each shot to compress the air up to a value that would produce the same power as the first shot.
1.use a regulator valve
2.use a gas from a liquid source ex: green gas/propane, butane
3.use air from a source with a volume under a fairy consistent mechanical compression ex: a thick rubber blatter, you can also use a piston driven by an high pressure air cylinder with a considerable about of expansion volume
- D_Hall
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You don't even need to get that fancy.boyntonstu wrote:if we could design a 2 valve system that is integrated with the breech open/close motion, we would be half way to a repeater.
One of the very first spud guns I ever saw ran unregulated CO2 in a 2 chamber set up. The first chamber was (obviously) a normal CO2 tank (paintball tank in this case). From there, the gas went through a needle valve to fill a second small chamber that was used for firing.
The second valve was your typical pilot-actuated piston valve. Nothing particularly exotic other than the fact that it ran unregulated CO2.
The set up was such that it took about a second to fill the "shoot chamber." If you simply held down the trigger? Yeah, you'd just lose all your gas. But really, 1 second is a very long time for such things.
So you pull the trigger, it dumps the shoot valve and a very small amount of gas is lost from the main chamber. You let off the trigger, the piston resets (chamber was filled from the pilot-side), and 1ish seconds later the gun was ready to fire again.
Note that the gun was a single shot breech loader. It took more than 1 second to load a new projectile. I always thought that was a safety issue, but even it wouldn't be that hard to work around.
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iknowmy3tables
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yes D_hall is right, having two valve is unessesary, having to operate two valves is something you find in a newbie gun, to use a working piston valve with a permanently attached input you either need to have a very limited rate of flow, you can add a valve to cut it off but then you have to play around with that too when your shooting. the other approach that uses piston valves which I would say is the best approach is to use a 3way 2position valve as a pilot
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