I can't say there's much that is overly innovative about this, I would say the only unique feature would be its sheer size. Here is the basic cannon design, done in SketchUp. The biggest motivation was hey, free pipe! But, these dimensions are subject to change.

Chamber: 8" Schedule 80 PVC, 48"
Barrel: 6" Schedule 80 PVC, 120"
Including the 6" tee and elbow, the chamber seems to be around 2200 cubic inches. The C:B ratio is about 0.7. Using MAPP gas, three spark gaps, and a 5lb projectile, HGDT calculates a muzzle energy of just over 10,000ft/lbs. Highly doubt I'd obtain that, but sure sounds impressive if all conditions are right.

As pictured, excluding PVC cement weight (It'll add up!), I calculated the weight of this gun at ~137lbs. This excludes fuel source, metering, chamber fan, batteries, ignition system, carriage, recoil management, blind flanges/bulkheads (Or whatever I end up using for the access panel at the end of the chamber and breech block; large sized blind flanges are pricy!), and any other misc. hardware needed for the project. This could all add another 50-100lbs, but I can't realistically calculate this all at the moment.
Yep, big project, pun intended. Size and weight makes this a unique challenge, requiring special care to perform proper solvent welding techniques. This is going to take some time; I already have the sections of pipe, the 6" Tee, and a 8" to 6" bushing at the time of this posting. Actually got two reducing bushings because it was such a deal on eBay! Placed a .30-06 cartridge in the photo for size reference.

A shot of the pipe sections. Placed an M1 Carbine in the photo for size reference.

Again, this will take a bit of time to get rolling, so updates probably won't be every day. But unlike my previous large cannon, I WILL complete this one.