Cylindrical Shells
#1
Posted 01 July 2004 - 06:04 PM
Also, for shells with the 1/8" fuse hole, is wrapping the visco in some tape, inserting it, and hot-glueing both ends sufficient to hold it in?
Thanks guys
#2
Posted 01 July 2004 - 06:27 PM
For the small festival ball shells, secure the fuse to a snug fit and then use hot glue either side to secure.
#3
Posted 01 July 2004 - 07:48 PM
This is the shell - rising comet attached, and the pile of meal I propose to lift it with. The lift is 6.5g of 2-9mm granules.
mods: is this ^ pic too big?
Anything seriously wrong here? Any suggestions would be appreciated.
#4
Posted 01 July 2004 - 09:36 PM
#5
Posted 01 July 2004 - 09:50 PM
I'm waiting on some screens from Steve so I can sort my granules out. I was thinking approx 4mm grains would suit ?
Thanks for the help.
#6
Posted 01 July 2004 - 10:02 PM
#7
Posted 01 July 2004 - 10:33 PM
#8
Posted 02 July 2004 - 09:54 AM
There is a table in the Passfire Reference section that gives typical lift charges.
#9
Posted 02 July 2004 - 03:02 PM
Good guide lines for spherical shells are 30 grams for a 3" and 40 grams for a 4" +- 5 grams. Cylindrical shells tends to be higher and this adds on some extra wheight. (I use about 15 grams of lift for a 2" cylindrical shell of ~70 grams.)
The mesh size is not critical. For 2-3" shells a grain size of 2-5mm is something to start with.
One second time fuse is something to start with for a 2-3" shell.
I know a lot of people has a lot to say about lift and time fuses. I can only say one thing:
-You have to find out the correct parameters your self.
Pyro is not an exact science.
EDIT: By the way your shell looks nice :-)
Edited by Yugen-biki, 02 July 2004 - 03:03 PM.
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#10
Posted 02 July 2004 - 05:00 PM
#11
Posted 02 July 2004 - 05:24 PM
"If your Aunty had balls.... She'd be your Uncle!"
#12
Posted 03 July 2004 - 11:45 AM
If you have to have a longer fuse because of your comets have to be hanging there, I would suggest that you should take some of the meal powder inside the fuse and replace with a couple of black fuse (this will act as a quick fuse).
I think you would need at least 5 seconds fuse and about 2 second fuse to ignite the lift charge. This will give you 3 seconds for the shell to travel up from the mortar (20 to 25 meter). Depending on the lift charge quality.
Yugen-biki: You have to find out the correct parameters your self
#13
Posted 05 July 2004 - 01:16 PM
Thanks for the advice, but I really don't understand the last bit. Do you mean 5 seconds to run away from the mortar?I think you would need at least 5 seconds fuse and about 2 second fuse to ignite the lift charge. This will give you 3 seconds for the shell to travel up from the mortar (20 to 25 meter). Depending on the lift charge quality.
#14
Posted 05 July 2004 - 01:55 PM
Yugen-biki: You have to find out the correct parameters your self
I don't understand.
http://www.freewebs....biki/Index.html
#15
Posted 06 July 2004 - 10:07 AM
I assume you mean by passing the damp composition through a 10 mesh sieve. I haven't tried this method yet, but will give it a go.Use a 10 mesh screen to granulate your lift powder. That will be equal to roughly 2F.
If I use a 10 mesh sieve with my pressed, granulated stuff, should I use grains that the 10 mesh holds, or just try to get the grains close to 10 mesh?
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