#1
Posted 25 June 2013 - 04:33 PM
Other thoughts: I'm obviously not looking for hundreds of shots off of a manually pressurized tank, maybe 3-4 to be realistic. I'm thinking that the tank for this system would need to be something stronger than PVC, such as aluminum, to be able to work at higher pressures. Could a solenoid system rigged to the trigger work?
Anyways, this is what I'm looking into. If you have any experience that could start my research and planning off in the right direction, it would be much appreciated. If not, still, thanks for your time
"ah man, I would give you so much for one of those NIB crossbows or one of those crossbows on the floor. The ones on ebay have gone up to $59 and the shipping alone is $12." -Rip32
#2
Posted 25 June 2013 - 05:06 PM
Here's my resume:
^click that. it's a firing vid.
It's a Dart tag gun with a big salvo tank (back pressure tanks are key) Banded RF20 bladder and a Clippard "Mavo-3" valve(get it from ebay not clippard. Clippard reams you on shipping).
My lessons learned:
Pick a blaster with a turret that actuates by the trigger pull. (firefly, maverick, dart tag gun - my personal favorite)
For Consistent pressure I would suggest a banded bladder (stretch two layers of 1 1/2" bike inner-tube over it). It spares you the cost of a regulator.
Use a back pressure tank. Big salvo, panther, hornet and a Clippard Mavo-3 valve. That valve shuts off the air reserve then vents/fires the tank. If you go with a pin pull tank instead you are venting excess reserve out the barrel with each shot.
My system gets me ten shots @ 70'.
~BritNerfMogul
#3
Posted 25 June 2013 - 05:16 PM
Edit: Essentially, the post directly above mine is the same thing, just actually made.
Edited by rego, 25 June 2013 - 05:18 PM.
#4
Posted 25 June 2013 - 07:04 PM
A quick question - just because I'm not a fan of the bladder style tanks, do you think it would be possible use a rigid back pressure tank such as aluminum with a regulator attached? Or do you think it would be inefficient due to a long priming (or pumping) time and a low amount of cycles (shots fired)? If hand-pumping a rigid tank wouldn't work, I may have to consider using an air source such as a HPA tank.
"ah man, I would give you so much for one of those NIB crossbows or one of those crossbows on the floor. The ones on ebay have gone up to $59 and the shipping alone is $12." -Rip32
#5
Posted 25 June 2013 - 07:25 PM
These are awesome, and really cheap. They've got them in 3 sizes. They should work well for your purposes.I'm really excited to see these two posts, this gives me a great starting point. Thanks shmmee and rego for that, much appreciated.
A quick question - just because I'm not a fan of the bladder style tanks, do you think it would be possible use a rigid back pressure tank such as aluminum with a regulator attached? Or do you think it would be inefficient due to a long priming (or pumping) time and a low amount of cycles (shots fired)? If hand-pumping a rigid tank wouldn't work, I may have to consider using an air source such as a HPA tank.
Youtube
LS and Retaliator boltsleds are currently available at https://www.facebook.com/RoboM8/
#6
Posted 25 June 2013 - 07:27 PM
~BritNerfMogul
#7
Posted 25 June 2013 - 08:29 PM
[15:51] <+Rhadamanthys> titties
[15:51] <+jakejagan> titties
[15:51] <+Lucian> boobs
[15:51] <+Gears> titties
[15:51] <@Draconis> Titties.
[15:52] <+Noodle> why is this so hard?
#8
Posted 25 June 2013 - 09:01 PM
Shmmee: Of course, I'm building this for longevity as well as not-kill-people-with-plastic-shard'ity, hah In experimenting with the gun you showed me, did you ever try the hand tank/regulator combo? I'm curious what the pumps to shot ratio was.
Draconis: The regulator should prevent the inconsistency, more or less, I thought?
Once again, thanks for everyone that has put in their input, its been great!
"ah man, I would give you so much for one of those NIB crossbows or one of those crossbows on the floor. The ones on ebay have gone up to $59 and the shipping alone is $12." -Rip32
#9
Posted 25 June 2013 - 09:52 PM
Nope. I went straight to a bladder. I've never counted pump strokes, but I'm sure it will vary between tanks, reserves and pumps. I counted about 30 pumps in my vid which will normally get all 10 shots off - so 3 pumps per shot? At the very least a dual stage pump is a necessity.... did you ever try the hand tank/regulator combo? ...
Edited by shmmee, 25 June 2013 - 09:56 PM.
~BritNerfMogul
#10
Posted 25 June 2013 - 10:58 PM
Roboman: Those look great! I assume those are metal, finished with some sort of white spray?
Shmmee: Of course, I'm building this for longevity as well as not-kill-people-with-plastic-shard'ity, hah In experimenting with the gun you showed me, did you ever try the hand tank/regulator combo? I'm curious what the pumps to shot ratio was.
Draconis: The regulator should prevent the inconsistency, more or less, I thought?
Once again, thanks for everyone that has put in their input, its been great!
They are polypropylene. Rated to 500 psi burst, 120 working. If you could somehow get one to fail, it would just tear, and would not send shrapnel anywhere. Super lightweight, too.
Youtube
LS and Retaliator boltsleds are currently available at https://www.facebook.com/RoboM8/
#11
Posted 25 June 2013 - 11:03 PM
I'm planning to do a backpressure tank variant of this design inside a Firefly. I suggest using a Firefly shell over a DTB due to more comfort and a significant more amount of workspace. I've discussed all of this with Schmmee in the past and he is definitely the one to consult on this type of project.
Good luck.
Edited by ShaNayNay, 25 June 2013 - 11:04 PM.
New Jersey is fuckin weird
#12
Posted 26 June 2013 - 01:10 AM
ShaNayNay: I'm actually going to use the Supertech 9000 shell I finally got a hold of! I looked a lot more into the thread that rego referenced, by Doom, and I'm leaning toward going that way. Doom used a combination of a QEV, a three-way directional valve and a pneumatic cylinder to cycle the bolt. It took me a little while to understand, but now that I've got it, I really like the set up. That being said, using the Hornet trigger system looks to be a lot easier to build and work with. Wish you the best mate!
"ah man, I would give you so much for one of those NIB crossbows or one of those crossbows on the floor. The ones on ebay have gone up to $59 and the shipping alone is $12." -Rip32
#13
Posted 26 June 2013 - 07:23 AM
~BritNerfMogul
#14
Posted 26 June 2013 - 01:05 PM
http://nerfhaven.com...showtopic=21429
The second post is what I think you'd find interesting.
http://nerfscience.blogspot.com/
#15
Posted 26 June 2013 - 04:13 PM
Holy shit it's Captain Slug.
#16
Posted 29 June 2013 - 09:30 PM
The advantage of the bladder tank is that the final couple of shots still get close to the same range as the first. This is not the case with regular hard tanks.
Draconis: The regulator should prevent the inconsistency, more or less, I thought?
The regulator will only make the first few shots consistent. As soon as your tank pressure drops below the regulated pressure, you're going to have weak shots. The advantage of having a bladder is that you have variable volume but more consistent pressure. Rigid tanks are the opposite, rigid volume but variable pressure. Our blasters are pressure driven, so a bladder would be better in my opinion.
With a rigid tank, you're going to need to pressurize it much higher than you would with a bladder, in order to get the same number of shots. This high over pressure is going to require a regulator to make the first few shots consistent. With a bladder, you can adjust pressure somewhat by banding it, but you don't need a regulator because the pressure will be much lower.
I have a magstrike bladder hooked up to an AT2K tank through the magstrike valve (not totally sure what it's called). I can pressurize the bladder, then press the magstrike valve which fills the tank. Then fire, and press the magstrike valve again which refills it. Fairly basic, but I'm sure you can rig something up with a back pressure tank or other pieces so you're not pressing a button after firin
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