Posts: 35
I don't know if this is or would be considered a new topic; probably not, but I have a question concerning the "assumed" power of combustion powered cannons. When I first logged in to this site today as a 38 year- old newbie to this site, I saw where a fella who had been out of the combustion scene for awhile and had gone on to pneumatics said that thunder guns only produce @ 30-60 pounds of thrust. -I've yet to see a chart anywhere to calculate that, outside of propane metered systems.How does one come up with that figure? Do we set up a bathroom scale to shoot and assume that the number shown in the little window is the amount of pressure that was pushing the spud along? AND, I question its voracity due to the distances I've achieved with heptane, using fist sized spuds down to spud/carrot, etc. plugs @ thumb sized. Can any one clarify this for me?
I am aware of the ballistics involved in carrying a heavy projectile down range, but 30 to 60 pounds of thrust ? There must be more than that involved if I'm shooting LARGE russet potato's through two sheets of 3/4" subflooring married together with sub-floor adhesive from 160' (taped) away.-- That from a 42" x 4" chamber, double sparked off of a BBQ ignitor, and a 2"x 6' barrel. Propellant : Heptane.
With this same setup I can shoot a raquet ball through slightly less than taught chicken wire from @ 80' away, and not even cut up the ball; but leaving the tell-tale appearance in the wire where it stretched to the give point like wrapping foil around a ball.
Now, come on people, don't just come in here and view this, shrug your shoulders and leave. Let's have some real think- tank action here; after-all, isn't this sight touted as the "Greatest Spud-Gun Sight" on the web ?
Put your money where your mouth is and walk the walk. Give me info or give me ignorance or give me spud-bux compensatory to back when I first posted this query.
