PowerLabs Cannon Research |
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Introduction:(WARNING: All the information contained on this page is for educational purposes ONLY! Do NOT attempt to replicate ANY of the experiments contained here. No more information will be volunteered by PowerLabs on these subjects than what is contained here. Be aware that each and every experiment described here is exceedingly dangerous and requires training, equipment, and skills that are not all mentioned on this page!) |
![]() First of all I chose to fire a tennis ball out of the barrel, as I didn't believe a potato would sustain the forces I had in mind. Secondly, hair spray (which is mainly a watered down alcohol solution with all sorts of sticky polymers which produce relatively little heat, burns slowly and stink like hell when they burn) just wouldn't do it. I decided the most energetic propellant I could use would be a 60%propane, 40% butane gas mixture which is commonly used in blow torches for small welding jobs (hydrogen was also considered, but its 500PSI combustion pressure was deemed too hazardous. Acetylene would be even more spectacular, but too prone to detonations). Also, I was going to burn it in a pure oxygen atmosphere, since that would allow me to input 5 times more fuel in, for a much higher energy output, combustion temperature, and consequently higher pressure. The combustion pressure of the mixture is quoted as being in the 300PSI region (Van Nostrand's Encyclopedia). In order to hold that, the pipe would have to be quite thick! I chose the largest diameter (20cm, 8") pressure rated pipe the nearby hardware store had as my combustion chamber and used a coupler to bring it down to a second pipe that was the diameter of a tennis ball (8cm). The pipe and coupler were all 4mm thick walls, which I *hoped* would sustain the pressure. I used a multiple spark piezo-electric stove igniter with a spark gap on the o-ring sealed threaded cap on the bottom of the combustion chamber and placed two wires forming an "X" at the beginning of the barrel to prevent the tennis ball from falling in. The entire device cost me some $100 (not counting the fuel) and 2 days of construction to build; a time during which while my parents were in Germany on a 2 day trip, as I knew they would not approve of it. Once the glue was thoroughly dry, the time to test it came. Unfortunately, it was raining outside so I decided to test it indoors (OK, so I was not the smartest kid back than, but come on, I was only 14 years old!). I filled the combustion chamber with pure oxygen from a 900CC welding cylinder I got from the same hardware store, and injected the calculated (slightly over stoichiometric) amount of fuel into it using a syringe. I dropped a tennis ball into it, aimed it at my sister's door (a solid wood door, 50 meters across the living room from my room where I was standing) with a slight upwards angle, expecting it to bounce back and stop (never having experimented with fuel/oxygen mixtures before I had no idea of just how much power I was dealing with), and clicked the igniter. A massive explosion ensued and I was knocked on my back with the recoil, which also left me slightly dizzy and with ringing ears from the muzzle blast. Still stunned by the sheer power of the shot (and amazed that the cannon was not blown to pieces on my hands), I looked at my sister's door only to see that there was light coming in through it. I remember being worried about it, but not so much as I was hoping to find the missing piece on the other side and somehow glue it back. On opening the door I was amazed to find out that the wooden door had a foot square (30x30cm) chunk blown off from it as the ball pushed material from the front out through the back at several hundred km/h. The entire room was covered with splinters and the door had cracks on it running from side to side! As you might imagine, explaining this to my parents wasn't very easy... |
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The next step: Nitrocellulose (Gun Cotton)! |
![]() ![]() In the end, once all these problems were solved, a very large batch of nitrocellulose was produced: 280 grams. This required two litres of mixed acids and several packages of makeup removal cotton disks. Once all the nitrocellulose was prepared, it was thoroughly washed, neutralized with sodium bicarbonate, and stabilized with urea. This was kept under water until needed, and than dried in a vacuum dessictor prior to use.
The research goal became to find out what was the highest possible muzzle velocity we could achieve from the 1meter long PVC pipe cannon. Nitrocellulose was placed in it and ignited through a length of cannon fuse that was placed into the pipe through a 4mm diameter hole on the side. We fired the cannon upwards using increasingly larger amounts of propellant (0,5gram increments) and used a chronometer to time the airtime of the projectile and than inputted that into the equation v = sqrt( 2 x g x d ) to solve for its average velocity (muzzle velocity should be higher). At 2.5grams we obtained a firing velocity of 560km/h. At 7 grams the velocity was calculated to be 960km/h. Since we were firing in a residential area (Stefan's house) the cannon was making enough noise to really bother the neighbors and earn us complaints so we decided to fire one final shot with 14 grams. The pipe exploded into pieces and we decided that a new cannon had to be built with the objective of breaking the sound barrier (347m/s, 1137ft/s, 1249km/h). |
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PVC Cannon: |
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Steel Cannon: |
We knew that if we were to safely break the
sound barrier with a golf ball on a cannon we would need a very strong
barrel. We decided to use a steel pipe and went out to a couple of
scrapyards to find one. After driving for almost an hour and looking
everywhere for something that would have just the right inner diameter to
fit a golf ball we came across an incredible finding! A very large
Caterpillar truck pneumatic actuator arm; the pipe was 1m60long and had
chromium plated alloy steel walls 1.3cm (1/2") thick! Since it was designed to withstand
extremely large loads in its duty, we were sure that it would withstand the
firing pressure required to get a golf ball going to mach1, and beyond! Best
of all, it had a 2cm thick steel end cap fitted on it! On ignition,
this blank shot produced a column of fire that lip up the sky from horizon
to horizon and extended 30 meters (90 feet) straight up into the night sky. As the
sound of the explosion thundered through the firing site, the pipe rammed
itself over 1 meter into the ground, making it very difficult for us
to remove it. Once we got it out, we noticed that the 2cm thick steel cap
had been blown off by the enormous pressure! It was time to make a new one.
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Results! |
A few more blank shots were than attempted with
smaller (20 - 30 grams) amounts of nitrocellulose and these were taped. The
nitrocellulose used for these shots was slightly damp and so it burned at a
slower rate, making visible fireballs. Videos of the tests are available for
download by clicking the still frame captures (450 and 300kB each).
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Comments? Mail me. Last updated 11/02/10
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