rna_duelers wrote:. . . Any chance of some videos of some supersonic wax projectiles?Or rather there unseen path before impact?
I was so excited to test it, and there are so many effing parts to pack, I completely forgot to bring a camcorder. All we had on hand was a camera phone whose owner has not sent me the (crappy) photos yet.
dongfang wrote:. . . I wonder if you can reach mach 2 with a lightweight (drilled hollow) slug.
Not likely. The chamber would have to be much larger, running on hydrogen, and the barrel much longer.
jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:As air drag increases exponentially with velocity and you're going so fast, I doubt blunt cylindrical slugs are doing you any favours. Why not try something like the profile below? It shouldn't be too hard to turn a wooden mould for the nose section, and the rear hollow can be a simple dowel mandrel.
Your dowel design is excellent and easy to make - I'll try it. Keeping the weight up front should reduce tumbling.
jrrdw wrote:I made a 1" bondo slug for my cannon, shot it at 40 psi, it went aprox. 50 yards and split into 3 pieces. . .
Something was wrong with your bondo or some contamination left weak crevices. The bondo slugs I made are hard as a rock. Even the wax slugs do not break apart, as I saw two of them bounce off the ground far downrange. Try again - the bondo really packs a punch.
ShowNoMercy wrote:Why not just machine some nice aluminum rounds?
Because the material is $1.40 per
inch, and aluminum-on-aluminum creates tearing friction.
BC Pneumatics wrote:Accuracy +/- 12" @ 100' Perhaps you should spend some time in this area, it seems to be the only aspect of spudguning that this thing doesn't already dominate. (Well, that and simplicity, but screw simplicity.)

8)
That spec is understated. Accuracy is more like +- 6" if you try to pick spuds of the same weight and try to keep the forward surface of the spud as flat as possible when loading into the breech. I think the turned wood slugs will help a lot. I have not measured the accuracy of wax, but I suspect it will be drastically improved because of the predictable and even flat ends. I also have not tested accuracy of the 8 foot barrel, though it is probably not much different.
I've been trying to find someone to rifle the aluminum barrel (maybe just the short 4 footer) with no luck. The air acting on uneven spud shapes steers them all over the place once the initial speed is reduced by drag. The next major factor is the weight of the slug. Lighter slugs go faster and fly straighter initially, heavier slugs fly slower, drop faster, but are less deflected by the air.
The most detrimental factor for accuracy is the combustion pressure. If I run air/MAPP or oxygen/MAPP at one atmosphere, the results are very predictable. Hybrid mixes are all over the place. It is difficult to get exactly the same mix every time - even with the finely graded pressure guage I have on it.
I also have not tested total distance with wax or bondo at 3X mix with the 8' barrel. Since I test distance at a lake, it should be easy to canoe out and recover intact floating wax slugs and see what shape they are in. By time they hit the water, they are merely falling at terminal velocity - water impact is not likely to bruise them.