Piston Bumper
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- Specialist 3
- Posts: 326
- Joined: Sun Oct 01, 2006 5:45 pm
- Location: Enoch, UT(next to Cedar City)
Ok, I just finished a chamber sealing piston that I made out of Redwood(Bad idea) and after I fired it twice my pretty pink piston(hahaha, redwood, pink) was cracked really bad. I have a compression spring to help slow the piston in my gun, and I figure the main problem was the redwood, but should I get something else to help slow my next piston?
I haven't done it but from what ive seen people cut tennis balls in half and use them as bumpers... theres a good easy solution.
- rna_duelers
- Staff Sergeant 3
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- Location: G-land Australia
Tennis balls work ohhk.But make sure you have a hole in the middle to vent it.
- experament_u2
- Specialist 2
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- Joined: Sun Aug 06, 2006 5:04 am
just get some rubber or air hose and stick in the bak and it should work 8)
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- Private 4
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- Joined: Sat Oct 21, 2006 8:55 pm
Has anyone tried not using a bumper, like just leaving some air in the chanber to sorta cushon it, because I think that would make it quieter.
I have been thinking something like that. When your gun operates at lets say 200 psi, you should have some kind of valve that shuts at 100 psi. That way, only half of the pressurizes air will escape. By the time it escaped, the ammo has been shot out of the barrel. When the valve shuts at a pilot presure of 100 psi, the piston will move forward again, saving some of the pressurized air in the chamber. That way, you can operate your gun at 200 psi, but you dont have to fill it from scratch, sinds the chamber will still have pressure little less then 100 psi.
Hope you understand what I mean ....
Hope you understand what I mean ....
- schmanman
- Staff Sergeant 2
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I don't use a bumper in the swat gun. It works just fine, and after several hundred shots, nothing shows any signs of stress. I may put some hose in there, though.
Persistence is a measure of faith in yourself
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- Private 4
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Ya that's ecactly what I was thinking of, and I was thinking that maybe, since that little bit of air is there to cushon it, that the valve wouldn't make as much noise because it isn't actually slamming into anything, just sorta stopping when it compresses the air.POS wrote:I have been thinking something like that. When your gun operates at lets say 200 psi, you should have some kind of valve that shuts at 100 psi. That way, only half of the pressurizes air will escape. By the time it escaped, the ammo has been shot out of the barrel. When the valve shuts at a pilot presure of 100 psi, the piston will move forward again, saving some of the pressurized air in the chamber. That way, you can operate your gun at 200 psi, but you dont have to fill it from scratch, sinds the chamber will still have pressure little less then 100 psi.
Hope you understand what I mean ....
I want to see if using a REALLY strong spring will work to keep some air in. I'm going to try it in my first piston. I can always tune it by putting in incrementally less powerful springs. You might be able to keep some air in it that way or somehow make it semi-auto.
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- Private 4
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- Joined: Sat Oct 21, 2006 8:55 pm
ya maybe but i was just looking for something to make it quieter.