Nice way of automatatiserising the falling block...
Maybe I mispelled that..
Blocker bolt still rules..
Gun Freak wrote:
Oh my friggin god stop being so awesome, that thing is pure kick ass. Most innovative and creative pneumatic that the files have ever come by!
Gun Freak wrote:
Oh my friggin god stop being so awesome, that thing is pure kick ass. Most innovative and creative pneumatic that the files have ever come by!
So THATS what its called, eh? Originally, the loop on the right side was not there and it fed air from the top right. A mechanical actuator lifted the valve open and it DID have a rather strong magnet on it to retain the BB until the other valve was open (not shown).
Edit: Machining a nylon 'bolt' should give you a small enough clearance to not have to worry about leakage. Either that or a lot of little teeny O-rings to exasperate the crap out of you.
Oh, and thanks for the compliment. I 'automated' this valve for a bbgun made from nothing but brass fittings and tubes a couple of years ago. I just needed Jack's talent for encasing the whole thing in epoxy to make it look/handle well.
kenbo0422 wrote:Machining a nylon 'bolt' should give you a small enough clearance to not have to worry about leakage. Either that or a lot of little teeny O-rings to exasperate the crap out of you.
I avoid o-rings like the plague, mainly because they have to be replaced and my "talent" for encasing stuff in epoxy usually doesn't allow for much maintenance. It is conceivable to have a good seal from a tight fit though, this is after all how the original Girandoni works:
The Girandoni system - upper two images show tubular ball magazine on right side of gun, distinctive loading block traversing the receiver. Note that receiver casting is a single top piece. Again notice the smooth transition in lines between the receiver and the air reservoir in this authentic specimen. Lower image shows the sliding loading bar with its ball socket and with the right hand retaining screw removed. These loading bars were tapered so precisely that, before the magazine spring was added during reassembly, the bar would slide into an airtight battery position by its own weight!
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:I'm thinking this could be made to fit well in a "T" style submachinegun...
Will that mechanism pulse the airflow or will the spring loaded piston just start farting from the pressure applied? I would imagine it to open just enough to release the pressure, and stay in that position until the pressure is removed.
Labtecpower wrote:Will that mechanism pulse the airflow or will the spring loaded piston just start farting from the pressure applied? I would imagine it to open just enough to release the pressure, and stay in that position until the pressure is removed.
Hadn't you seen the original subject of this thread in action? The stepped piston is the key, emptying the firing chamber faster than the trigger valve can fill it, allowing the piston to re-seat, thus building up pressure in the firing chamber again for the cycle to repeat.
Thinking about the practical aspect of making a prototype, I think it would be feasible to use the pin valve on the HPA bottle as the trigger. Here is a preliminary design drawn to-scale with a 4mm barrel for #4 birdshot as ammunition, something I have a lot of:
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
Ah, I see. Would be pretty easy to tune if you'd use pressurized air instead of a coil spring behind the piston. The diagram you made reminds me a lot of the crosman setup, would be pretty cool to convert the 2240 to automatic