My Boomstick
#1
Posted 03 July 2006 - 12:34 AM
This is what breach system looks like. There would normally be a barrel in front of it and the plunger rod/spring behind it, but I excluded those parts and others for the sake of simplicity in demonstrating how it works.
The pieces below the cpvc tube (copper) when functioning are actually in the pipe held by the set screws above the cpvc pipe (grey). The charging handle would normally be attached to the cpvc pipe. Keep in mind, all of these parts are inside of a piece of 1" piece of pvc pipe when the gun is actually functioning.
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The Charging handle is pulled back and the breach looks like the above picture(the spring is compressed at the same time). A shell falls in from the feed tube (not shown) as the slot in the cpvc (grey) aligns with a corresponding slot in the main body of the gun.
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The pieces of copper will look like they are in the above image (excluding the cpvc shroud). The middle piece of copper is the shell (which would have a stefan in it).
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As the charging handle slams forward the piece of copper on the right will begin to push the shell into the forward breach chamber.
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When the charging handle comes to rest in its furthest forward postion, all of the breach compnents will look like they do in the above picture.
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This is the same as the above picture, except the cpvc shroud is included. The charging handle is in the same position. At this point the gun is completely primed and ready to be fired. Once the gun is fired, to reprime it, the charging handle is pulled back and the shell falls out of the foward slot in the piece of copper as the piece of cpvc uncovers it.
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So now you hopefully understand my breach/loading system, so heres my plunger assembly. Its somewhat beaten up from lots of firing though and i need to remake it with better materials so it won't fall apart again. Other than that it works fine, it has an excellent friction to seal ratio and is somewhat light weight.
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Here's a picture of my fire control group. As the trigger slides backwards the wheel collar slides down along the rails i made of sheet metal rivited together, which all together forces the firing pin down.
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And here is a picture of all of the parts to the gun.
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One thing i like about this gun is that shells take roughly 10 seconds to make each, so it makes things convenient as i dont really have to worry about losing any.
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So at this point your probably wondering, "What the hell does this thing look like?". Well, you're just going to have to wait, as i took two pieces apart for pictures and forgot to teflon tape them together properly so they pulled apart. Tomorrow hopefully ill get around to dismantling the gun again and taping up the parts so they're airtight/ taking some pictures. Also i dremeled the clearances for the breach parts wrong, so i cant get any stats untill i remake the breach as all of the air generated from the plunger goes strait out of a 1/8" long slit in between two parts. this wouldnt be a big deal, but i dont have any spare 12"x1/2" copper repair couplers at the moment and alot of hardware stores tend to not carry them. On the bright side the gun can cycle shells perfectly and fire fine, it just cant fire anything yet.
#2
Posted 03 July 2006 - 02:17 AM
Can you put a video on youtube of the firing mech when you're done?
#3
Posted 03 July 2006 - 12:13 PM
Lookin' great. Keep it up.
Really like the trigger mech. Looks very reliable.
Also, what spring are you using as the main spring to propel the plunger?
Edited by Ronster, 03 July 2006 - 12:32 PM.
#4
Posted 03 July 2006 - 01:46 PM
EDIT: Before I forget; the idea is certainly not my own, but is Boltsniper's.
~ompa
#5
Posted 03 July 2006 - 02:50 PM
Excellent work! It looks great, and I can't really see any problems with the functioning of the gun. I will say one thing though, as I've encountered a few issues using a bolt system like yours. All that extra space from where the bolt has to slide leaves alot of dead space between where the plunger ends and where the dart is located. You could probably do away with half of the cpvc shroud you have there, and use the charging handle to both load the shell AND push back the plunger. That way, you don't need all that space between the plunger head and the beginning of the bolt for the bolt to slide around.
~ompa
I definitley have to second that to ompa about what he said with the charging handle and the bolt opener to be in one motion idea.
Marcoman6391
Favorite Quote^^^^^^
#6
Posted 03 July 2006 - 10:51 PM
what spring are you using as the main spring to propel the plunger?
The spring is just a spring I found in a drawer of springs in a hardware store. I dont have any stats on it.
The charging handle does cock the gun and cycle the shells simultaneously like on the FAR. When the piece of cpvc is pulled back to cycle a shell, the back of it pushes on the plunger head to cock the gun. take a look at the second to last picture again to see how the internals are laid out in the gun. I also realized that there would be a certain amount of dead space reducing the power of the gun but i was willing to use this somewhat flawed design as it makes up for it in ROF.You could probably do away with half of the cpvc shroud you have there, and use the charging handle to both load the shell AND push back the plunger.
And here are some of the finished pictures...
some stats:
plunger output: 5.25 cubic inches
active barrel length: 4.5 in.
dead space: 3.2 cubic inches
ammunition capacity: 8+1
ROF: I can cycle about 2 shells per second without jamming, if I go much faster than that though, the gun becomes prone to jamming.
sorry for the double post but i maxed the image limit in my last post.
#7
Posted 03 July 2006 - 11:00 PM
And my mistake; now looking at the assembled gun, I see why your cpvc shroud is longer than I expected. Sorry about the confusion, I thought it was for the bolt to move in, but now I see it's for the shells to drop in from the top.
~ompa
#8
Posted 04 July 2006 - 03:54 AM
P.S. OMG HOTNESS?
#9
Posted 04 July 2006 - 08:57 AM
1. In your pics are you showing the gun without the magazine or did I miss a very important detail?
2. Does the gun have a name?
3. What ranges can you get?
#10
Posted 04 July 2006 - 09:19 AM
but its a litle long dont you think?
is it posible to make it smaller?
greats
#11
Posted 04 July 2006 - 10:36 AM
Anyway, looks nice! I'd definitely like to see some ranges. If it shoots well, I'd say this is the best combination of cosmetics and functionality since the SCAR-N. Good job.
Edited by blinkycc13, 04 July 2006 - 08:24 PM.
This is called a screwdriver it is used to unscrew or screw in screws.
#12
Posted 04 July 2006 - 10:38 AM
#13
Posted 04 July 2006 - 10:51 AM
He is from Holland
-Enigma1313
#14
Posted 04 July 2006 - 11:36 AM
I'ts a shotgun design, so the charging handle is the pumping handle as shown in these pictures:
(I took some more pictures today)
And here are some more pictures on the trigger mech:
And some other pictures:
"lol, i like it.
but its a litle long dont you think?
is it posible to make it smaller?
"
The metal stock actually shoulders nicely and it has a rock solid feel. It's not as long as it might seem, to me it feels perfect, its alot shorter than a real 12 gauge...
"1. In your pics are you showing the gun without the magazine or did I miss a very important detail?
2. Does the gun have a name?
3. What ranges can you get?"
1 the magazie is the feed tube along the top of the gun
2 I could go give it an acronym like everyone else, but i just started calling it my boomstick....(its from a movie...)
3 as stated in my above posts I cant record ranges yet due to bad clearances between parts of my breach that create a major leak
Here is a picture of all of the sub assemblies of the gun taken apart. You can see the feed tube above the gun, I laid some shells out above it to show how they fit in the gun.
I wont get the gun firing for a while, as I have a friend over from New York for the next week ( I live in Illinois)
and he probably doesn't want to watch me dremel out new breach sub assemblies...
#16
Posted 04 July 2006 - 03:42 PM
Well, very nice job, and very well-put together, now that I see how the thing works.
Ronster, I can say with a decent amount of certainty, now that I think I understand it, that it is indeed pump action.
~ompa
#17
Posted 04 July 2006 - 04:56 PM
On a sidenote you should look into a rotating linear mag...should increase your ammo capacity by loads.
The Reaper
Take your design for your magazine, copy it 6 or 7 times around a piece of pipe that rotates and voila you're set to rock some socks.
FA.
Edited by FromAbove, 04 July 2006 - 04:57 PM.
Murphy: All right, get your stupid fucking rope.
Do you mean with an integration or what? Because size doesn't have anything to do with performance...-NerfMonkey
#19
Posted 07 July 2006 - 11:12 AM
#20
Posted 08 July 2006 - 01:19 PM
Thanks for answering my previous questions but I have a few more to ask, what size copper do you use for your breach and shells and what size pvc is the copper encased in?
For the shells I used standard 1/2" copper pipe, and for the breach that slides in and out of the cpvc i used a 1/2" repair coupling. They are around 12 inches long and 1/2" copper slides easily within it yet has a nearly airtight seal. Then I used cpvc for the repair coupling to slide in and out of, as they slide fairly easily within eachother, and are also airtight. I believe I used 3/4" cpvc, im not completely sure. For the main body of the gun I used 1" pvc, and for the charging handle I used 1 1/4" pvc.
Ah. I thought those screws on the bottom of the handle screwed into the gun itself. Apparently I was wrong. Again.
Well, very nice job, and very well-put together, now that I see how the thing works.
Ronster, I can say with a decent amount of certainty, now that I think I understand it, that it is indeed pump action.
~ompa
Yes, its pump action, the screws on the bottom of the charging handle screw into the piece of grey cpvc.
Can you please get a video up on youtube?!
I really want to see some shots fired.
The the breach still leaks, so I probably won't have a video up of it fireing for a while, but I could make a video of me loading it and chambering/ejecting shells. Would that be something any of you would want?
#21
Posted 08 July 2006 - 02:23 PM
The the breach still leaks, so I probably won't have a video up of it fireing for a while, but I could make a video of me loading it and chambering/ejecting shells. Would that be something any of you would want?
Please do, I would love to see this thing in action.
#22
Posted 08 July 2007 - 10:07 PM
#23
Posted 09 July 2007 - 02:26 PM
PSN: ultra920 MGO:ultra920 shoot me an MGO invite if you play
#24
Posted 09 July 2007 - 04:30 PM
I really feel bad about ressurecting this thread but I really want to learn more about this amazing piece of machinery. Have you gotten it firing yet? If so what are ranges? Again I feel bad about this, but I saw you were active recently.
I appreciate your interest in my homemades, but unfortunately i have not worked on it recently at all for various reasons. One of which is becoming disinterested in the overall design and the spring/plunger method of firing darts seemed to me boring. The way I designed this gun is also very finicky and complicated to work on, as everything must be lined up perfectly or else part A doesn't seal properly or part B jams and keeps part C from functioning properly etc.
If I do work on it and make any significant improvements then I'll definitely post in this thread to inform you all. The gun essentially does work, it cocks, loads a shell, "fires", ejects the shell and recharges the plunger spring while loading a new shell however it doesn't fire darts because i screwed up some of the tolerances on the breach parts so they leak the air instead of using it to push the dart out of the shell/barrel. As of right now if i decide to work on it i will have to fabricate a new spring retainer, plunger head, and breach. The plunger head broke because there is so much pressure behind the spring forcing it into the pin that retains it when cocked and the spring retainer broke simple because i made it too thin for the pressure it has to handle. Both of those parts wont be had to make its just the breach that would be difficult to fix.
What i want to know is how far apart the bullets are going to be. Like, from the most left bullet to the most right bullet? Other than that, i hope to see it working.
I'm not quite sure i know exactly what you're talking about. If you mean what is the spread as in how the pellets from a real shotgun spread apart at a distance, then the answer is that they don't. This isn't a shotgun in that kind of sense, it just fires 1 dart at a time. If you wanted you could split the dart into thirds, quarters, halves, etc and then load them into the shells and that would create a spread as others have done but unmodified its just like any other spring gun like a SNAP etc. Also even if it did spread, that number will vary with the range you are firing at. At close range the spread will be vary limited and at a farther range the spread will generally be greater.
#25
Posted 26 April 2009 - 07:44 PM
how much would i have to pay you to make me one? and can it use cpvc shells?what spring are you using as the main spring to propel the plunger?
The spring is just a spring I found in a drawer of springs in a hardware store. I dont have any stats on it.The charging handle does cock the gun and cycle the shells simultaneously like on the FAR. When the piece of cpvc is pulled back to cycle a shell, the back of it pushes on the plunger head to cock the gun. take a look at the second to last picture again to see how the internals are laid out in the gun. I also realized that there would be a certain amount of dead space reducing the power of the gun but i was willing to use this somewhat flawed design as it makes up for it in ROF.You could probably do away with half of the cpvc shroud you have there, and use the charging handle to both load the shell AND push back the plunger.
And here are some of the finished pictures...
some stats:
plunger output: 5.25 cubic inches
active barrel length: 4.5 in.
dead space: 3.2 cubic inches
ammunition capacity: 8+1
ROF: I can cycle about 2 shells per second without jamming, if I go much faster than that though, the gun becomes prone to jamming.
sorry for the double post but i maxed the image limit in my last post.
Edited by gotnerf, 26 April 2009 - 07:44 PM.
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