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November 13th, 2009, 18:39 | #46 |
Lego Head
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Why not try putting cuts/grooves on an angle on the tail? As long as they all are equal in size and distance apart the air that goes through here would create a pin-wheel affect on it creating the spin you need; sort of like rifled slugs in a shot gun.
Is likely cause the tail is heavier than the ball itself; it almost looks that way too to be honest. I wonder if you made the tail a smaller diameter as well? Ie when you mill these make the tail smaller so that the sphere/round is larger than its tail and then try the grooves to see if they can create that spin?
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_________________________________ "The hydrogen economy car from the people who brought you the 'Hindenburg'" - Glen Foster Condoms do not guarantee safe sex any more. A friend of mine wore one and was shot by the woman's husband! Last edited by Dracheous; November 13th, 2009 at 18:42.. |
November 16th, 2009, 13:00 | #47 |
Prancercise Guru
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Grooves or holes to spin it, or a little streamer kind of like a drogue. That would be a bit of a nightmare to attach though.
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Airsoft, where nothing is hurt but feelings. |
November 16th, 2009, 15:11 | #48 | |
If you have a method for doing this reliably I'd probably be willing to try it out. The only thing I can think of is cutting them by hand. While I have tools small enough to do it there's no way I can - by hand - get anything approaching real precision. It's only 6mm after all. If I go through all that work and it still sucks, does it suck because the grooves don't do squat, or does it suck because my grooves were a shitty +/- 20% precision at best? (e.g. 0.2mm off if I go with 5 evenly spaced grooves, that's not even touching the angle/twist issue...)
Quote:
The tails are lighter than the ball on the assembled pieces. Unlike firing just the tails, the assembled projectiles are getting to the paper and don't appear to be keyholing, the accuracy is just clearly inferior compared to plain BBs. Maybe rifling would fix that, maybe not. Last edited by DonP; November 16th, 2009 at 15:14.. |
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November 16th, 2009, 15:45 | #49 |
Prancercise Guru
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Probably you'd want to jig them on a drill press or milling machine with a cutting disc in the chuck.
Then you could cut a few slots for an aero effect but I think you're already approaching a silly amount of labour as it is.
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November 16th, 2009, 16:37 | #50 |
Age Verification Removed Due To Trade Dispute
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Why not adapt your mold instead of cutting or Dremeling tiny little grooves?
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November 16th, 2009, 18:32 | #51 |
Prancercise Guru
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Molds are expensive, even one like that so untill the fix is proven to work it's easier to tweak the projectiles.
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November 16th, 2009, 18:37 | #52 |
Tys
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for grooves or ridges, you'd want a die to press the projectiles through.
BB's are "soft"...any die with a sharp edge will work for POC. As an aside...I bet a gas shotgun can be adapted to shoot these with very little work. |
November 17th, 2009, 13:01 | #53 |
Prancercise Guru
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Did you do anything to try and mitigate variations in the projectile when you formed the cone (I think it's so thin that chances of it being off are pretty low) or when you attached the cone to the BB (more of a chance there)?
Maybe if there was a variation that would account for all the flyers.
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