Air tank alternative: fiberglass-reinforced soda bottles
Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 2:25 am
I have seen some people use plastic bottles as air tanks for pneumatic chambers, but they often switch to a PVC or metal tank because they want more airflow, more pressure, or structural integrity. By addressing the latter two problems, PET can become a cheaper, lighter, and safer alternative to PVC tanks.
PVC is a heavy and brittle plastic, which is why manufacturers don't recommend it for use with gas: when PVC fails, the release of the compressed gas can send fragments of plastic flying everywhere at high speed, and that is a very dangerous failure mode.
PET bottle, on the other hand, are much more lightweight, and they fail in a much more controlled manner: the plastic "tears" along the side, rather than producing many fragments of plastic. (examples here and here)
Air Command Rockets, a group who deals mainly with water rockets, has investigated reinforcing soda bottles with fiberglass cloth and epoxy. In their quest for maximum performance and altitude, they have managed to create bottles with a maximum pressure of 300PSI; very significant for a plastic bottle like that.
PET bottles can either be reinforced with fiberglass cloth and epoxy, or a similarly strong and easier to obtain method, fiberglass strapping tape. The use of fibers to reinforce bottles also makes them safer: the fibers reduce the tearing that occurs when bottles fail, and they hold shrapnel together to an extent, making them safer in comparison to PVC failures.
The main downside to regular plastic bottles comes from their opening: it is relatively small (0.87" inner diameter, slightly larger than 3/4" PVC) and it requires a nonstandard thread to connect to it. There are some bottles with much larger openings (1.2" ID) but they are more uncommon. To attach the bottle, you can either glue a piece of 1/2" into the bottle opening, or make an adapter that threads onto the bottle to go to a standard NPT-type fitting. As of right now no such adapter exists but I'm hoping something will come of this thread.
To summarize, PET bottles can be a good pressure vessel for cannons that don't need a lot of airflow because they are cheap, lightweight, and safer in some ways versus PVC tanks. I'm hoping this inspires some people to try using reinforced bottles as alternative tanks as a way to save money or to be a little safer. When I have time I will post some pictures of an example tank that I'm working on.
PVC is a heavy and brittle plastic, which is why manufacturers don't recommend it for use with gas: when PVC fails, the release of the compressed gas can send fragments of plastic flying everywhere at high speed, and that is a very dangerous failure mode.
PET bottle, on the other hand, are much more lightweight, and they fail in a much more controlled manner: the plastic "tears" along the side, rather than producing many fragments of plastic. (examples here and here)
Air Command Rockets, a group who deals mainly with water rockets, has investigated reinforcing soda bottles with fiberglass cloth and epoxy. In their quest for maximum performance and altitude, they have managed to create bottles with a maximum pressure of 300PSI; very significant for a plastic bottle like that.
PET bottles can either be reinforced with fiberglass cloth and epoxy, or a similarly strong and easier to obtain method, fiberglass strapping tape. The use of fibers to reinforce bottles also makes them safer: the fibers reduce the tearing that occurs when bottles fail, and they hold shrapnel together to an extent, making them safer in comparison to PVC failures.
The main downside to regular plastic bottles comes from their opening: it is relatively small (0.87" inner diameter, slightly larger than 3/4" PVC) and it requires a nonstandard thread to connect to it. There are some bottles with much larger openings (1.2" ID) but they are more uncommon. To attach the bottle, you can either glue a piece of 1/2" into the bottle opening, or make an adapter that threads onto the bottle to go to a standard NPT-type fitting. As of right now no such adapter exists but I'm hoping something will come of this thread.
To summarize, PET bottles can be a good pressure vessel for cannons that don't need a lot of airflow because they are cheap, lightweight, and safer in some ways versus PVC tanks. I'm hoping this inspires some people to try using reinforced bottles as alternative tanks as a way to save money or to be a little safer. When I have time I will post some pictures of an example tank that I'm working on.