Jump to content


Photo

Syringe Popgun

A goofy proof-of-concept gun

40 replies to this topic

#26 boltsniper

boltsniper

    Member

  • Contributors
  • 591 posts

Posted 22 March 2006 - 07:56 PM

You could use one way valves to let air in when the plunger is drawn...
  • 0

#27 davidbowie

davidbowie

    Member

  • Members
  • 422 posts

Posted 22 March 2006 - 08:02 PM

What I was talking about was having multiple plungers, all cocked and loaded, like shells, on a revolving drum or maybe even belt, all running past a firing mechanism which would release the plunger shaft.
  • 0
Check out the all-new DBNerf. The source for all your DBNeeds.

#28 GeneralPrimevil

GeneralPrimevil

    Member

  • Members
  • 578 posts

Posted 22 March 2006 - 08:44 PM

That would take a lot of syringes.


CaptainSlug, you essentially want to make a Dr. Gatling design, only using these syringes instead of bolts...interesting. The RoF would be limited by how fast it would load, not really the motor speed. However, with any decent fire rate, 120VAC would be necessary to have firing commence for more than five minutes. Trust me on that. Even with the lowest-watt motors I have access to, none have the power to drive the barrels fast enough or have enough speed if geared down via drive belt(s). A 12VDC starter motor would be able to without too much of a drop in speed, but that would not last very long. Cooling, luckily, would not be a problem due to the life of the battery...

If you have access to a washing machine or a garage door opener, the motors from these are superior to anything I have yet to see used or use personally for a project such as this where there probably is a budget to deal with. Good luck, though.
  • 0
"Fear the man with one gun, for he probably knows how to use it."

#29 CaptainSlug

CaptainSlug

    Resident Mad Scientist

  • Administrators
  • 4,763 posts

Posted 22 March 2006 - 08:47 PM

I think the syringe head needs some surgery...

Yeah, I (or whoever wants to try the design first) might have to look at cutting the seal down or replacing it with a single O-ring.

I'll have a design sometime in the next 24-hours.

Even with the lowest-watt motors I have access to, none have the power to drive the barrels fast enough or have enough speed if geared down via drive belt(s).

I had a small 13RPM 12V turn-table motor assembly that would be perfect. That or something similar in the 10-50RPM range.
We're not talking alot of torque here and I have enough experience shopping for motors to know what I'm looking for.
But the simplest design for starters will be designed with a crank instead of a motor. Not aonly simpler, but authentic "gatling" to boot.

Edited by CaptainSlug, 22 March 2006 - 10:39 PM.

  • 0
The little critters of nature, they don't know that they're ugly. That's very funny, a fly marrying a bumble bee. I told you I'd shoot, but you didn't believe me. Why didn't you believe me?

#30 Denaeron 12

Denaeron 12

    Member

  • Members
  • 58 posts

Posted 22 March 2006 - 09:23 PM

Wow... this "just for fun" syringe gun has turned into a gatling gun...
Sounds awsome.
  • 0
Official Leader of the Nonsense Brigade
Yes, I'm the Cliff Claven of the Internet.

#31 Carbon

Carbon

    Contriberator

  • Moderators
  • 1,894 posts

Posted 23 March 2006 - 12:04 AM

Well, I did the aforementioned "surgery" to the plunger head. I cut off two of the three "rings" which were present on the head. Wow. Talk about a performance gain. Turns out I had a nested PVC/17/32" barrel around..I tested it, and I now can shoot stock micros, and get 40 feet. Similar ranges with stefans...the darts still need to be snug, but things are better. I still get 32' with the uber tight mega stefans in PVC. Vaccuum feed works with stock darts.

For triggering, I'm currently holding down the pullrod with my thumb, resting teh notch against the hole in the endcap. To fire, I let go.
  • 0
Hello. I am Indigo of the Rainbow Clan. You Nerfed my father. Prepare to die.

#32 CaptainSlug

CaptainSlug

    Resident Mad Scientist

  • Administrators
  • 4,763 posts

Posted 23 March 2006 - 02:48 AM

I came up with a name for your syringe gun. Since it's small and a single-shot pistol like a Derringer you could call it the "Syringer".
;) sorry that was corny.

And here's the really basic workup of mechanics of what my mental plan was. The drum might have to have a larger diameter than shown here to make the advancing ramp at a shallower angle.
Posted Image
Posted Image
It uses a miter gear set inside so that you turn the crank counter-clockwise and in turn the drum rotates clockwise at the same speed. I made sure all of the parts in the design are both cheap, and accurate dimensionally.

Edit: If I can find the right electric motor or a donor cordless drill I may have found a much simply way of making the motorized version with a different trigger system. I'll start a new thread for that later.

Edited by CaptainSlug, 23 March 2006 - 03:29 AM.

  • 0
The little critters of nature, they don't know that they're ugly. That's very funny, a fly marrying a bumble bee. I told you I'd shoot, but you didn't believe me. Why didn't you believe me?

#33 GeneralPrimevil

GeneralPrimevil

    Member

  • Members
  • 578 posts

Posted 23 March 2006 - 05:15 AM

I don't think you'll have a problem with just making the ramp start at, say, 330* and then end at 5*. However, that would only work if you had a slower RoF. To give you what I mean, think car engine. After so many RPMS, the valves springs have to get incredibly stiff to close the valve by the time to piston has to start compressing. To relate to the design, the piston has to hit the cylinder head and the dart leave the barrel before the chamber opens to allow another dart and the syringe is recocked.

This might be easier with less barrels; there would be less spring tension to fight against. Also, I worry about the 1:1 ratio. A slight advantage would be nice to allow less user fatique. It all depends on how stiff those springs are though...
  • 0
"Fear the man with one gun, for he probably knows how to use it."

#34 m15399

m15399

    Member

  • Members
  • 146 posts

Posted 23 March 2006 - 12:19 PM

A vertical clip would probably be easier to build than a drum mag. Isn't there some Nerf gun that was made a few years ago that worked like this? Chainblazer? As you can see, I don't know my Nerf guns...
  • 0

#35 davidbowie

davidbowie

    Member

  • Members
  • 422 posts

Posted 23 March 2006 - 11:55 PM

It seems like it would be easier to just attach a rod in place of the gear on the drum, and chuck it in a cordless drill, making sure to set it as slow as possible.

It's definitely cool, and definitely possible, but my concern is whether you will store enough ammo to keep up with a high ROF.
  • 0
Check out the all-new DBNerf. The source for all your DBNeeds.

#36 bizket12

bizket12

    Member

  • Members
  • 24 posts

Posted 24 March 2006 - 12:07 AM

Off the topic of the gattling gun, but on topic with syringes; has anyone tried to use a syringe inplace of the pressure reservoir or a spring powered nerf gun.

Like say in an LnL, I took a syringe, that has an AMAZING seal, and put that in place of the tube where pressure is built up.
I think this might add an entirely new aspect of modding spring guns.

If someone had this idea earlier I couldnt find it.

Edited by bizket12, 24 March 2006 - 12:08 AM.

  • 0

#37 CaptainSlug

CaptainSlug

    Resident Mad Scientist

  • Administrators
  • 4,763 posts

Posted 24 March 2006 - 12:16 AM

It seems like it would be easier to just attach a rod in place of the gear on the drum, and chuck it in a cordless drill, making sure to set it as slow as possible.

It's definitely cool, and definitely possible, but my concern is whether you will store enough ammo to keep up with a high ROF.

You summed up EVERYTHING I was thinking about while working on the motorized version.
I'm not sure if I should post that design or not because I don't know when I'll get around to making it.

Edited by CaptainSlug, 24 March 2006 - 12:17 AM.

  • 0
The little critters of nature, they don't know that they're ugly. That's very funny, a fly marrying a bumble bee. I told you I'd shoot, but you didn't believe me. Why didn't you believe me?

#38 Alexlebrit

Alexlebrit

    Member

  • Members
  • 8 posts

Posted 23 April 2006 - 09:12 AM

On the subjest of lubbing the plunger head, can I recommend KY-Jelly or similar. Ok so you've got to go into the pharmacy and ask for a syringe and some water-based lubricant jelly, and this might get you some funny looks (ask for condoms while you're in there, get all the embarressment over in one go), but it really works as a syringe lube, and won't cause any plunger head damage.
  • 0

#39 CaptainSlug

CaptainSlug

    Resident Mad Scientist

  • Administrators
  • 4,763 posts

Posted 23 April 2006 - 10:44 AM

But that's based on glycerin which won't last terribly long in open air. Just use silicone spray lubricant
  • 0
The little critters of nature, they don't know that they're ugly. That's very funny, a fly marrying a bumble bee. I told you I'd shoot, but you didn't believe me. Why didn't you believe me?

#40 Carbon

Carbon

    Contriberator

  • Moderators
  • 1,894 posts

Posted 23 April 2006 - 07:13 PM

But that's based on glycerin which won't last terribly long in open air. Just use silicone spray lubricant


Silicone doesn't work, though...binds up the plunger heads like crazy. You're right, though, alex...KY is water based (at least I think it is), so that should work with this particular kind of rubber. Good call.
  • 0
Hello. I am Indigo of the Rainbow Clan. You Nerfed my father. Prepare to die.

#41 CaptainSlug

CaptainSlug

    Resident Mad Scientist

  • Administrators
  • 4,763 posts

Posted 02 May 2006 - 03:17 PM

You're right, though, alex...KY is water based (at least I think it is), so that should work with this particular kind of rubber. Good call.

Ingredients: Chlorhexidine Gluconate, Glucono Delta Lactone, Glycerin, Hydroxyethylcellulose, Methylparaben, Purified Water, Sodium Hydroxide
The Glucose and Glycerin ingredients will slowly evaporate or congeal out over the course of a week or so and your oil wil change from a lubricant to a sticky resistant. You could try it and it will work for a while. If what I'm predicting will happen happens it will be easy to just clean it out of the gun.

You might want to try vegetable oil.

Edited by CaptainSlug, 02 May 2006 - 03:18 PM.

  • 0
The little critters of nature, they don't know that they're ugly. That's very funny, a fly marrying a bumble bee. I told you I'd shoot, but you didn't believe me. Why didn't you believe me?


1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users