Considering you're basically creating an explosion in an improvised chamber maybe safety glasses and/or some other kind of PPE might be appropriate, at least for the first test firing. However, by all means do it.
But do you still remember who sang 'Leader of the Pack?'Bestest undergrad course ever was T.C. Scott's lab for Mechanical and Aerospace Engineers.
But do you still remember who sang 'Leader of the Pack?'
Nauga,
and the Shangri-Las
Non-chlorinated brake cleaner makes a good bang, too. Sends a spud a long way.They’re hairspray/deodorant powered, not propane
your lucky, i grew up outside of detroit. my pinewood derby cars had to compete with kids who's cars were built at the GM tech center and tested in the wind tunnel...........Yeah, by “that dad”, I meant taking over the project. I’ll be there when he builds it, just out of curiousity.
Pinewood Derby I had to make a dad’s car, just so I would keep my hands off of his car making hot rodding improvements, paint perfection, etc. Year 1 I helped a lot, by Year 5, he did all of the work himself.
Safety-wise, he’s “one of those kids” who I trusted with a.410 at age 9 without supervision (after a lot of training and supervision years prior). Still a teen though...and in some ways needs MORE guidance now than when he was 9; He’s more creative with dangerous ways, lol (or not-lol).
In all the ones I've seen, the "head of the cylinder" is the potato or the tennis ball.I just thought of something. What about putting a schraeder valve on the combustion chamber. After spaying it full of hairspray, give it a couple of seconds of compressed air before ignition. Forced induction stupidity, lol.
My 17 year old son said he wanted to build a potato gun and gave me a parts list last week. I brought home the parts after running out to get some plumbing supplies for a furnace vent project today.
The hardest thing will be waiting for him to build it and not pester him to get started or help him improve it. Kinda like the discipline it took to not be THAT dad in Pinewood Derby.
Your pics and/or stories of shenanigans follow below - please begin:
I joined a fraternity that was full of ROTC guys (I started out as one). Suffice it to say I’m glad they’re on our side.Got a cup of Joe in hand and feet up on the desk, care to regal us with you tales of yesteryear?
I just thought of something. What about putting a schraeder valve on the combustion chamber. After spaying it full of hairspray, give it a couple of seconds of compressed air before ignition. Forced induction stupidity, lol.
I always suspected you to be dangerous.
My brother and I built some awesome, and occasionally deadly, potato guns. ( We accidentally killed a pigeon with a golf ball.)
My kids and I have built some awesome, and occasionally deadly, potato guns. (We hit a squirrel with a potato.)
My grand kids and I have built some awesome, and occasionally deadly, potato guns. (We killed a pink lawn Flamingo with an orange. I'm not completely sure it was an accident.)
Everybody should build a potato gun.
if you had one that was ready to fire, would it be a 'loaded potato gun'?
if you had a really nice one, would it be a 'sweet potato gun'?
If it has a spot to hang a pocket knife on it, ASSAULT potato gun!
Banned!!!!
LOL. Sorry. Had to say it!
What did these potatoes do to deserve being shot.??
They were violating stay-at-home orders.
That's a quick-release valve, used on trucks to let the brakes release quickly once the pressure starts to fall. Most often used on the emergency brakes, which have a big spring held back by air pressure until the driver wants to park the truck, or punches the control valve in an emergency when the primary system has failed.Just now read through the thread and saw that the talk about spud spud guns was all about explosives. The one I built used compressed air. You load with the air on. It’s when you cut off the air is when it fires. I’m googling it but don’t find anything. It works like the emergency system on trucks with air brakes. If the air pump fails it instantaneously releases air under pressure stored in a tank to lock the brakes. The spud gun is built with a 1” PVC barrel that is inside a 4” one. The space between them is where the air under pressure is stored. There is rubber diaphragm that closes off the barrel and directs the air pressure into the space between the big and little pipes. When you cut off the air, the pressure inside pushes the diaphragm back and let’s it all out through the ‘breech.’ Mine was about 4 feet long. It launched the piece of potatoe about a hundred yards
How about the semi automatic assault spud gun. https://theawesomer.com/potato-gatling-gun/15463/
So was the pigeon airborne?
View attachment 85008 Of course the spud gun's natural evolution leads to punkin' chunkin'. A guy down the street is a Delmarva champion. His rig has a barrel 14' long or so and shoots a 10 pound pumpkin a little over 4000 ft. No explosives allowed, so it's all compressed air.
Your basic pneumatic cannon.
Of course now it's useless, not was ever useful, since two fatalities in two years pretty much shut competition down. Now he hauls it out a couple times a year for fun, but his farm is only 200 acres, so to keep the flying gourd on his property he has to dial it way back.
I don't recall fatalities, at least at the 'home' Bridgeville site, but I know they first shut down due to a lawsuit from a volunteer who was hurt running a quad runner into a ditch, then they came back (I think working with a different landowner) but an air cannon explosion seriously injured a TV producer, and they never came back from that, at least in Delaware. It's a shame (even the injured producer later said she wanted Punkin Chunkin to continue) as it was quite a spectacle. I only made it to one, the last big one before the legal problems started.
View attachment 85008 Of course the spud gun's natural evolution leads to punkin' chunkin'. A guy down the street is a Delmarva champion. His rig has a barrel 14' long or so and shoots a 10 pound pumpkin a little over 4000 ft. No explosives allowed, so it's all compressed air.
Your basic pneumatic cannon.
Of course now it's useless, not was ever useful, since two fatalities in two years pretty much shut competition down. Now he hauls it out a couple times a year for fun, but his farm is only 200 acres, so to keep the flying gourd on his property he has to dial it way back.
...
We also made a steerable manned hovercraft out of a couple of gas-powered leaf blowers, some plywood, and vinyl pool liner.