How closely matched are your marbles and your barrel? Projectile blow-by gets more significant as pressures go up and bores go down... and I fully conceed that blow-by is not something I've looked at closely in HGDT (IE, I haven't confirmed that it's doing what it's supposed to be doing).spudfarm wrote:no..
the projectile was a marble "1.6cm" and i don't think that has much friction at all. th "oops" was made when i thought a marble was 0.5" ans then i realised that .5" is 1.27cm
HGDT 0.4 online
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it has a bit of gap around it.. can't tell how much but like 0.5mm all in all
mabe a little more since this was a small marble..
when i test my golf ball hybrid i am going to check all of this and put it up against the program 99%accurate and may take some pics of the ball in the barrel so you can run it on HGDT since you understand this fully.
mabe a little more since this was a small marble..
when i test my golf ball hybrid i am going to check all of this and put it up against the program 99%accurate and may take some pics of the ball in the barrel so you can run it on HGDT since you understand this fully.
"Made in France"
- A spud gun insurance.
- A spud gun insurance.
Yes, that's part of the idea behind it.drex wrote:i was wandering, could yous this program to model a regular combustion cannon by putting the mix at 1X
Probably reasonably, but exactly how accurate is something of an unknown - but with D_Hall's latest update, it seems to be getting very close to Latke's data, so things are looking good.if so would it be accurate?
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?
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Yes and no.drex wrote:i was wandering, could yous this program to model a regular combustion cannon by putting the mix at 1X, if so would it be accurate?
You CAN model a regular combustion cannon, but you don't do it by putting the mix at 1X. You do it by putting the disc failure at 0 psi (HGDT will then determine the mix appropriate to the altitude you live at...which may or may not be 1X).
how do i tell hgdt what altitude i live at?D_Hall wrote:Yes and no.drex wrote:i was wandering, could yous this program to model a regular combustion cannon by putting the mix at 1X, if so would it be accurate?
You CAN model a regular combustion cannon, but you don't do it by putting the mix at 1X. You do it by putting the disc failure at 0 psi (HGDT will then determine the mix appropriate to the altitude you live at...which may or may not be 1X).
EDIT: never mind i figured it out
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I think I would go with a more qualitative (to the user) approach;D_Hall wrote:A question for the masses....
Not that it's horribly surprising, but it appears that chamber fan performance may very well have a significant effect on system performance. Currently, HGDT simply has a "yes/no" option for chamber fans (turbulence induction). I've decided that this is insufficient.
The question then becomes precisely what IS sufficient?
Should I have a pulldown box that allows you to select from none, low, med, high, extreme?
Or should I have a text box that allows you to manually input a burn rate delta-V?
The first would be nice because it's simple for the user and includes a few options. But it does open the door for "low is too low, med is too high" scenarios.
The second allows one to really dial in on a gun, but it requires a bit more smarts from the user.
A third option would be a whole 'nuther input section dedicated to the chamber fan....
Thoughts?
None: No fan (duh), gases assumed to be queiscent.
Low: Single fan several inches from the spark gap. For example, fan 1" from breech and single spark at the center of a 12" long chamber.
High: Fan within a couple inches of the spark.
Not sure how to deal with the fan at the breech but several spark gaps along the chamber. First gap is a "high", subsequent gaps are more like "lows".
Not sure how to deal with fan diameter ~ chamber diameter versus fan diameter ~1/2, 1/3... chamber diameter.
A more detailed and/or quantitative treatment is just going to get into a bunch of parameters (fan diameter, air velocity, distance from spark, fan alignment with spark, fan alignment with chamber axis, ...) that few users will have accurate numbers for.

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D_Hall
Can you give a bit of info on what the "Insulation" options represent?
None: High heat transfer? Perhaps what you would get with a metal chamber -- coefficient of thermal conductivity 50~400 J/m/k/s, high density material.
Insulated: Lower heat transfer? Perhaps what you would get with a plastic chamber -- coefficient of thermal conductivity ~0.2 J/m/k/s, low density material.
Adiabatic: No heat transfer from gases to gun.
Can you give a bit of info on what the "Insulation" options represent?
None: High heat transfer? Perhaps what you would get with a metal chamber -- coefficient of thermal conductivity 50~400 J/m/k/s, high density material.
Insulated: Lower heat transfer? Perhaps what you would get with a plastic chamber -- coefficient of thermal conductivity ~0.2 J/m/k/s, low density material.
Adiabatic: No heat transfer from gases to gun.

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None was actually made to corralate to the data in your webpage for the technical spud gun.jimmy101 wrote:D_Hall
Can you give a bit of info on what the "Insulation" options represent?
None: High heat transfer? Perhaps what you would get with a metal chamber -- coefficient of thermal conductivity 50~400 J/m/k/s, high density material.
Insulated: Lower heat transfer? Perhaps what you would get with a plastic chamber -- coefficient of thermal conductivity ~0.2 J/m/k/s, low density material.
Adiabatic: No heat transfer from gases to gun.
Adiabatic is obvious.
Insulated is half-way between the two. Not sure why anyone would use it unless they truly had done a good job of insulating their chamber (who does that?), but since it took mere seconds to code I threw it in there.
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How much difference, in terms of heat loss, is there between metal and a plastic gun? The Coefficient of Thermal Conductivities are hugely different;
PVC 0.2 W/m/K
iron/steel 20~80 W/m/K
copper 400 W/m/K
Just wondering. Is the heat loss much greater in a metal gun than a plastic one? Is the greater heat loss significant? Is a PVC gun basically insulated?
PVC 0.2 W/m/K
iron/steel 20~80 W/m/K
copper 400 W/m/K
Just wondering. Is the heat loss much greater in a metal gun than a plastic one? Is the greater heat loss significant? Is a PVC gun basically insulated?

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I looked into that early on... Remember it's not just thermal conductivity, but also specific heat. In any event, I don't remember the numbers but I decided that it probably wasn't worth worrying about the differences at this time. There may come a time when I do, but until such time as the basic model can be well verified I'm not gonna lose much sleep over it. I mean, if my choice combustion model makes it impossible for me to ever predict something to closer than (say) 10%, does it really make sense to worry about tweaking something that only makes a 1% difference?
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I agree, not worth diddlin around with something that'll get lost in the noise.
Still, the difference in thermal conductivity is huge, the difference in heat capacity is almost nothing.
<table border="1"><tr><td>Material</td><td>Coefficient of Thermal Conductivity, K (W/m/K)</td><td>Density (g/cc)</td><td>Specific Heat Capacity (J/g/K)</td><td>Volumetric Heat Capacity (J/cc/K)</td></tr><tr><td>Silica aerogel</td><td>0.02</td><td>0.144</td><td>0</td><td>.</td></tr><tr><td>Air</td><td>0.024</td><td>0.0013</td><td>1</td><td>0.0013</td></tr><tr><td>PVC (cell core)</td><td>0.062</td><td>0.6</td><td>.</td><td>.</td></tr><tr><td>PVC (solid)</td><td>0.18</td><td>1.4</td><td>0.9</td><td>1.3</td></tr><tr><td>Glass</td><td>1</td><td>2.4 - 2.8</td><td>0.5 - 0.84</td><td>~1.7</td></tr><tr><td>Stainless Steel</td><td>16</td><td>.</td><td>.</td><td>.</td></tr><tr><td>Hi-carbon Steel</td><td>35</td><td>7.7 - 8</td><td>0.49</td><td>~3.9</td></tr><tr><td>Cast Iron</td><td>80</td><td>7.15</td><td>0.46</td><td>3.3</td></tr><tr><td>Aluminum</td><td>237</td><td>2.7</td><td>0.87</td><td>2.3</td></tr><tr><td>Copper</td><td>400</td><td>8.96</td><td>0.38</td><td>3.4</td></tr></table>
Still, the difference in thermal conductivity is huge, the difference in heat capacity is almost nothing.
<table border="1"><tr><td>Material</td><td>Coefficient of Thermal Conductivity, K (W/m/K)</td><td>Density (g/cc)</td><td>Specific Heat Capacity (J/g/K)</td><td>Volumetric Heat Capacity (J/cc/K)</td></tr><tr><td>Silica aerogel</td><td>0.02</td><td>0.144</td><td>0</td><td>.</td></tr><tr><td>Air</td><td>0.024</td><td>0.0013</td><td>1</td><td>0.0013</td></tr><tr><td>PVC (cell core)</td><td>0.062</td><td>0.6</td><td>.</td><td>.</td></tr><tr><td>PVC (solid)</td><td>0.18</td><td>1.4</td><td>0.9</td><td>1.3</td></tr><tr><td>Glass</td><td>1</td><td>2.4 - 2.8</td><td>0.5 - 0.84</td><td>~1.7</td></tr><tr><td>Stainless Steel</td><td>16</td><td>.</td><td>.</td><td>.</td></tr><tr><td>Hi-carbon Steel</td><td>35</td><td>7.7 - 8</td><td>0.49</td><td>~3.9</td></tr><tr><td>Cast Iron</td><td>80</td><td>7.15</td><td>0.46</td><td>3.3</td></tr><tr><td>Aluminum</td><td>237</td><td>2.7</td><td>0.87</td><td>2.3</td></tr><tr><td>Copper</td><td>400</td><td>8.96</td><td>0.38</td><td>3.4</td></tr></table>
