Using A Silencer
#1
Posted 08 December 2004 - 06:42 PM
#2
Posted 08 December 2004 - 06:47 PM
"if anyone gives you shit about being a geek, just remind them that all their bases are belong to you." -Talio
#3
Posted 08 December 2004 - 07:02 PM
~ompa
#4
Posted 08 December 2004 - 08:22 PM
How are you planning on making it? If you are just drilling holes in a pipe dont shorten the barrel. If you are making an actual silencer that has chambers for the... air, erm, then I suppose you could shorten the barrel some since you wont lose pressure immediately assuming the chambers of the silencer are small.
Edited by >Fuse<, 08 December 2004 - 10:00 PM.
#5
Posted 08 December 2004 - 08:32 PM
#6
Posted 08 December 2004 - 08:37 PM
I hope you know that silencers don't affect nerfing. So, if you are using it to hide a big barrel yes, you should shorten the length of the barrel, but if you are trying to make a real silencer, no keep the barrel the way that it is.
The sound from nerf guns is all from the mechanics, so a silencer wont do jack for you, but if you want to go ahead.
You're both quite wrong. Silencers work very well on pump guns (and spring guns that are internally dampened), as all but about 2 dB of the noise is the pop of the dart leaving the muzzle.
nerfcrusader, don't shorten the barrel. A silencer actually decreases range a bit (it decelerates air leaving the muzzle), so you don't want to sacrifice more range by decreasing the length of the barrel. A bit of advice: I would attach it to the muzzle with a coupler, so you can remove the silencer if you want.
#7
Posted 08 December 2004 - 09:33 PM
Agreed. We've had this discussion many times before. We also came upon the decision that the best possible design was to drill the holes such that they slowly got smaller as it went back towards the gun. And, of course, wrap with some foam sheet, but there was debate on this, experiment and see what works best for you.I hope you know that silencers don't affect nerfing. So, if you are using it to hide a big barrel yes, you should shorten the length of the barrel, but if you are trying to make a real silencer, no keep the barrel the way that it is.
The sound from nerf guns is all from the mechanics, so a silencer wont do jack for you, but if you want to go ahead.
You're both quite wrong. Silencers work very well on pump guns (and spring guns that are internally dampened), as all but about 2 dB of the noise is the pop of the dart leaving the muzzle.
nerfcrusader, don't shorten the barrel. A silencer actually decreases range a bit (it decelerates air leaving the muzzle), so you don't want to sacrifice more range by decreasing the length of the barrel. A bit of advice: I would attach it to the muzzle with a coupler, so you can remove the silencer if you want.
And search, i can't be bothered at the moment, but there was a recent thread with some very useful images and discussion.
#8
Posted 08 December 2004 - 09:56 PM
Techno-Dann of the Seattle Tactical Nerf Team
#9
Posted 09 December 2004 - 12:54 AM
i made it because my ears would ring after shooting at 80 psi.
i had heaps of pvc lying around.
i ended up using 8 inches of 20mm pvc with holes drilled in it and wrapped in insulation (safe stuff w/o fiber glass) and covered with 8 inches of 55mm pvc.
it fits on my 15mm barrel and makes a really big diference in sound.
i didnt modify the barrel in anyway and im still getting the same ranges as w/o the silencer
Edited by notorious_oxide, 09 December 2004 - 12:54 AM.
COREY
#10
Posted 09 December 2004 - 04:06 AM
If you are making a working silencer, it will work effectively with the right sciences taken into account. There's; where the air's going to go, how much air is coming out, etc.
Silencers will work very well if made correctly - I made one that actually silenced the whole air movement (the trigger noises were still there, but that's inevitable) and when I shot the dart, I thought I hadn't pumped it - it then hit the wall.
So, yea, good luck with it all. If you would need any help, do not hesitate to ask us.
-Tidge.
Also active on NerfHQ as Tidge.
#11
Posted 09 December 2004 - 04:35 PM
#12
Posted 09 December 2004 - 06:53 PM
This is a good place to start. Felt works well in Zero's design. A hole-y tube with foam pipe insulation around it works well too.
#13
Posted 09 December 2004 - 07:04 PM
#14
Posted 09 December 2004 - 07:35 PM
Wait, don't real silencers have holes in a piece of "pipe" the same ID as the barrel? Otherwise the air would just escape around the bullet when the bullet reached the larger silencer tube. Has anyone tried Zero's silencer because I have a feeling that it might not work with the piece of pipe that has the holes in it is 3/4". But if the pipe on the silencer with holes in it was the size of your barrel, the dart wouldn't have enought momentum to make it throught the barrel with all the friction and no air presure behind it and it would probably get caught on the holes. Just my two cents on this issue.Zero's Silencer Writeup
This is a good place to start. Felt works well in Zero's design. A hole-y tube with foam pipe insulation around it works well too.
#15
Posted 09 December 2004 - 08:35 PM
#16
Posted 10 December 2004 - 03:16 AM
Firearm silencers usually are a tube two-ish times the bore diameter, with plates set across the tube with a hole in the middle slightly larger than bore, and lined up with the muzzle.Wait, don't real silencers have holes in a piece of "pipe" the same ID as the barrel?
...
Has anyone tried Zero's silencer because I have a feeling that it might not work with the piece of pipe that has the holes in it is 3/4". But if the pipe on the silencer with holes in it was the size of your barrel, the dart wouldn't have enough momentum to make it throught the barrel with all the friction and no air pressure behind it and it would probably get caught on the holes.
As the silencer is fitted over the muzzle, the dart would not normally be propelled past that point anyway, so you aren't losing pressure/motive force. By the time a dart reaches the silencer, its momentum will carry it through.
3/4" is quite a bit bigger than the diameter of a micro, so it's not going to catch.
#17
Posted 10 December 2004 - 12:26 PM
I made mine based off of Zero's design. It doesn't affect the range, and the silencer works... kinda. It's more of a muffler than a silencer, but it still looks (and sounds) cool. I suspect that with a real gun or a high-pressure system it wouldn't work very well.Wait, don't real silencers have holes in a piece of "pipe" the same ID as the barrel? Otherwise the air would just escape around the bullet when the bullet reached the larger silencer tube. Has anyone tried Zero's silencer because I have a feeling that it might not work with the piece of pipe that has the holes in it is 3/4". But if the pipe on the silencer with holes in it was the size of your barrel, the dart wouldn't have enought momentum to make it throught the barrel with all the friction and no air presure behind it and it would probably get caught on the holes. Just my two cents on this issue.Zero's Silencer Writeup
This is a good place to start. Felt works well in Zero's design. A hole-y tube with foam pipe insulation around it works well too.
Techno-Dann of the Seattle Tactical Nerf Team
#18
Posted 10 December 2004 - 05:12 PM
with the silencer, the larger the gap between the dart and the pvc (or wutever you made the silencer out of) the less efetctive it would be in reducing sound
COREY
#19
Posted 10 December 2004 - 07:17 PM
From what I have noticed with the blaster directly beneath in the next paragragh, you are for the most part right. However, with a tight fitting silencer, there is the possibility of a slower dart caused by the unreliable friction of the tight bore.
My "silenced" AT3k; by using the directions (slightly moddified for my use) on this site works magnificantly. It is inaudible past 10 feet. As long as I keep all moving parts lubed and the case tight, no squeaks are heard by the enemy while in hiding.
Firearm silencers are different. First off, they don't "silence" anything, unless its a .22 with subsonics. They draw out the pressure behind the bullet, causing a report of around 90 dB or less and what sounds more like a pneumatic nail driver going off. The most "silenced" suppressor is found on HK's MP5SD series, whose internals are pictured lower.
That is an outdated design, found also on early attempts of American/German/Russian designs of silent "spy pistols," which were found with a fixed (non-removable) suppressor, again much like that of the MP5SDs. What I find interesting on the SDs (also found on my AT for obviously different reasons) is what has been done to the barrel: porting just prior to the silencer to drop the bullet's speed to a subsonic level. It eliminates the sonic boom found after the bullet leaves the muzzle, or the need to use 9mm subs, it just depends on how you look at it.
Edited by GeneralPrimevil, 10 December 2004 - 07:18 PM.
#20
Posted 26 January 2005 - 09:58 PM
#21
Posted 26 January 2005 - 10:39 PM
Move on.
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