Ral123
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Exploding high energy gases
As far as I know oxy/acetylene can achieve up to 3000m/s at normal pressure. I did a test with butane/oxygen witch turned out pretty destructive. It
crushed a kinda beefy aluminium spray can.
I wonder is it possible to let gasses accelerate in a thick walled tube and in the end to have so much velocity and temperature, that a light
projectile(with much smaller diameter) can be launched with high velocity.
Here's my test of 10L stoichiometric oxygen/butane:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypTADUYQ5ZI
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Alster370
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If i remember correctly, a projectile can only move as fast as the speed of sound value of its propelling gas. If that holds true, your best bet is to
use hydrogen, with oxygen or air. The application GASEQ gives you the speed of sound of pretty much any gas mixture you can think of at various
pressures.
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gnitseretni
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voitenko_compressor
"In a typical Voitenko compressor, a shaped charge accelerates hydrogen gas which in turn accelerates a thin disk up to about 40 km/s."
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Ral123
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My idea is that down the pipe, the gases are more and more compressed. I've played with gas/O2 in a very thick walled polypropylene pipe. When just
making noise not much happened. When I putted an apple in to be launched, the pipe cracked just before the apple. That means, the detonation
accelerates along the length. May be in long steel pipe it'll be able to give an airgun pellet the energy of 0.22lr?
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