VERA: My very favorite gun
-
- Private
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Thu Sep 18, 2014 12:15 pm
- Contact:
- jrrdw
- Moderator
- Posts: 6572
- Joined: Wed Nov 16, 2005 5:11 pm
- Location: Maryland
- Has thanked: 39 times
- Been thanked: 22 times
- Contact:
Soooo.....you'll be shouldering it for the shot, correct? Any real man would (snicker snicker).D_Hall wrote:Stay tuned, folks... If everything goes well, on Tuesday I'm going for 1.75 million ft*lbs.
- D_Hall
- Staff Sergeant 5
- Posts: 1920
- Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 7:37 pm
- Location: SoCal
- Has thanked: 7 times
- Been thanked: 42 times
Ooof... 1.75 didn't happen folks. No fault of VERA's, mind you. The attempt for 1.75 was going to be done using an "extra" shot that had already been paid for by a customer in the event their test series concluded early. It didn't so there wasn't an extra asset to go for broke with. Bummer.
- D_Hall
- Staff Sergeant 5
- Posts: 1920
- Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 7:37 pm
- Location: SoCal
- Has thanked: 7 times
- Been thanked: 42 times
It takes 3 people about 45 minutes just to open the barrel, load her, and button her back up. Figure $125/hr per person. That's $280 and doesn't even begin to account for initial set up, range expenses, photography, sabot design/construction, etc.jrrdw wrote:Wow that's really more than I expected. I was thinking 3 or 4 hundred.
Regardless, even $10k/shot is dirt cheap compared to the alternatives (hint: sled tests generally start about about $75k/shot).
- MrCrowley
- Moderator
- Posts: 10078
- Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2006 10:42 pm
- Location: Auckland, New Zealand
- Been thanked: 3 times
Does it get cheaper the more shots someone orders?
What's the projectile weight limit? You've probably mentioned it somewhere before but I've forgotten.
That's 2,405,869 ft*lbs, my friends.
What's the projectile weight limit? You've probably mentioned it somewhere before but I've forgotten.
- D_Hall
- Staff Sergeant 5
- Posts: 1920
- Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 7:37 pm
- Location: SoCal
- Has thanked: 7 times
- Been thanked: 42 times
Absolutely. It costs about $15k just to set up the gun and get things ready to go. You haven't even fired the gun yet. After that..... I don't know exactly what the curve looks like as nobody has asked for a large number of shots, but I imagine in production you could get it down to about $3k/shot.MrCrowley wrote:Does it get cheaper the more shots someone orders?
There isn't any hard limit, but we've been advertising 500 pounds. Mind you, that's just to cover our bases. The most anyone has asked about is 300 pounds.What's the projectile weight limit? You've probably mentioned it somewhere before but I've forgotten.
- jrrdw
- Moderator
- Posts: 6572
- Joined: Wed Nov 16, 2005 5:11 pm
- Location: Maryland
- Has thanked: 39 times
- Been thanked: 22 times
- Contact:
It be neet to see the process from start to finish but due to propritary issue's and concerns that's not going to show up on Youtube anytime soon or if at all. :bom:D_Hall wrote:It takes 3 people about 45 minutes just to open the barrel, load her, and button her back up. Figure $125/hr per person. That's $280 and doesn't even begin to account for initial set up, range expenses, photography, sabot design/construction, etc.
Regardless, even $10k/shot is dirt cheap compared to the alternatives (hint: sled tests generally start about about $75k/shot).
- mark.f
- Sergeant Major 4
- Posts: 3634
- Joined: Sat May 06, 2006 11:18 am
- Location: The Big Steezy
- Has thanked: 57 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
- Contact:
Sucks to have a cannon so tied up in bureaucracy and labor unions. Although that's honestly the only way anyone interested could conceivably afford to build a cannon like this (unless they also snort cocaine off of supermodels rears in their spare time as well).
Sorry to hear it didn't work out... keep us tuned for the next customer cool with you publishing their tests.
Sorry to hear it didn't work out... keep us tuned for the next customer cool with you publishing their tests.