Gathering info
Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 5:57 am
Where some people mount their fans in cannons is puzzling. Doesnt having the fan between the sparks and the barrel subject it to lots of escaping pressure?
do you count the volume of the complete fan assembly (fan and vent tube) or just the wall thickness of the vent tube and the fan in your ratio calculations? because i was thinking that the inside of the vent tube would also provide some pressure on ignition.
Jager told me it was important that i run the vent tube to the bottom of the chamber, how far off the end of the chamber (the dead zone) is acceptable for combustion cannons?, i was thinking of running the vent tube from the top to 1 inch off the bottom with vent holes for the last 6 inches.
The fan blowing (all examples include a fan mounted on a vent tube) would introduce air into the bottom of the chamber and pushing the vapour out on the outside, the fan sucking would remove the vapour from the bottom through the vent pipe and introduce oxygen from around the chamber. Which is preferable?
Is the spark strip placement important?
cheers
joe
do you count the volume of the complete fan assembly (fan and vent tube) or just the wall thickness of the vent tube and the fan in your ratio calculations? because i was thinking that the inside of the vent tube would also provide some pressure on ignition.
Jager told me it was important that i run the vent tube to the bottom of the chamber, how far off the end of the chamber (the dead zone) is acceptable for combustion cannons?, i was thinking of running the vent tube from the top to 1 inch off the bottom with vent holes for the last 6 inches.
The fan blowing (all examples include a fan mounted on a vent tube) would introduce air into the bottom of the chamber and pushing the vapour out on the outside, the fan sucking would remove the vapour from the bottom through the vent pipe and introduce oxygen from around the chamber. Which is preferable?
Is the spark strip placement important?
cheers
joe