Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 9:57 pm
unfreaking believeable. Best I have ever looked at
Your Spud Cannon Community
https://www.spudfiles.com/
The scope definitely works. The odd shaped slugs still wave around in the wind, but on average you'll hit inside a 1' circle at 100'. After that, all bets are off. I'm sure that simple metal sight would achive exactly the same result, but the scope looks much cooler. It was the cheapest crap scope at Wal Mart.natev3790 wrote:...does the scope even work that great with the big size ammo?
3", 20" long.ProfessorAmadeus wrote:... Whats the chamber diameter?
The gun itself is up around 60 pounds now. The barrel / clamp assembly is easy to remove, so it fits in my car and is easier to carry. In the outdoor photo, the red tilt base (brazed steel stock) and the black swivel base (extra-heavy-duty chair swivel) above it stay attached to the gun when it's off the tripod and add another 15 pounds or so. All that mass is good though, as it absorbs most of the recoil.squeaks wrote:How heavy is that thing with all those metal parts(minus the stand of course)?
I'm thinking that oxy/acetylene is inevitable. I have a remote trigger so I can stand behind a tree. I'm not so sure about supersonic though. Check out this site where they built a 20' long barrel on a pneumatic. The thing pulverizes cinderblocks with a potato and punctured a steel computer case with an ice slug. Excellent videos. http://jacoblarson.org/Spudcannon/ We'll see how the 8' barrel trials go. I don't have enough combustion chamber to use a 20' barrel.rna_duelers wrote:This thing would have no worries making a supersonic projectile with an some more atmospheres and some extra fuel. Definitly go for the oxy/acetylene mixtureit would be very very very very FREAKING COOL!
Hmm... The way the barrel closes, I could use a flat plastic wafer as a burst disc - very simple. I could probably do away with the metering pipes. Pressurize the chamber with MAPP to regulated pressure, then continue to pressurize with oxygen to the higher oxy regulator setting. I'd have to add gaskets to the chamber ends to prevent slow leaking. Have to eliminate low-flow valve. Replace fresh air check valve with a ball valve. Acetylene becomes unstable above 15PSI, so I'm favoring MAPP right now.drac wrote:You would have enough for a 20' barrel if you used multiple mixes, like 3-4 atmospheric mixes...
I'm an IT geek, former pro audio engineer. Some of what I know came from metal shop in high school (23 years ago!) and some more experience at a job making anesthesia ventillators (many instricate machined parts). I'd really like to own an old Bridgeport . . .schmanman wrote:go for it. 20' long barrels are fun. do you work at a machine shop or something? because that looks like some pretty nice machining there. stick around. you are a welcome addition to the forum.
No he means a bridgeport milling machine, they are pretty much bulletproofrna_duelers wrote:Bridgeport rotary Engine?Is that what you mean?If so what type,12A 13B?
Could operate as a diesel. THAT would be unique. Build pressure until it spontaneously goes off. Or pressurize, then set it off with an explosive primer. Definitely heading in a direction I like - actual artillery.beebs111 wrote:the only thing i see wrong is that you wouldn't control when it fired. there is a concept gun designed by fiveseven that operates off of this principle(not really important, just intreresting)
Pfft make the most awsome gun on the forums, and expect only a few comments? Pfft! I say goodluck, Build me one for $500! I'll pay you!Sorry to gang up replies like this. I didn't expect so many reactions!
lol diddo!SpudStuff wrote:Amazing! That is a sweet gun!
I like how complicated it looks! Did you have many parts already or buy them all for the 700 dollar price?