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January 20th, 2011, 03:11 | #16 | |||
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By applying stress in compression on the frame, the tension stresses on the mechbox caused by the spring and piston will be unloaded to the steel band. Since the bands are designed to be used in high tension applications, it has a significant less chance of fracturing than a zinc alloy. The strongest mechbox I have ever heard of being made was a mechbox CNC milled from a steel billet from one of McMaster's Mech. Engineering shops. The steel billet wasn't cheap. Quote:
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Comparing Nylon to metals, Nylon would have very poor relative wear resistance. Wear is not the issue in this case, it is the strength and toughness of the material. I think I might have convinced my self to test the steel band on one of my already broken mechboxes.
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Weee! Last edited by Qlong; January 20th, 2011 at 03:23.. |
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January 20th, 2011, 04:21 | #17 | |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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Quite frankly, steel is overkill for a mechbox unless your planning to go above 600fps on a V2 mechbox. And then you'll have to re-invent the piston to handle those stresses, and use a 4 gear system to get enough torque to move it lol 7075 aluminum would handle 500fps no problem in the exact dimension of current V2 mechbox design, given they put radii everywhere there's a sharp corner. Anyway, they did actually used to have CNC mechboxes. I believe pro-win made them, and someone in Canada made a few as well. The reason they're not around anymore is because they're unnecessary. A good tough-as-nails G&P mechbox with a sorbo pad will withstand prolonged abuse And if your REALLY paranoid about it, get a CA249 with the huge block of a PGC mechbox lol |
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