Brian the brain wrote:What you could do is make the piston diameter only slightly larger than the seat diameter.
This will give you better porting but it will also make the piston pop open faster.
The air has less surfaceon the front to push on when it is closed position, so the pilotpressure needs to drop further before the piston can start moving.
When it does, pressure will hit the full diameter of the piston while the pilot is at a lower pressure already.
This will cause it to snap back even harder than in a "normal" pistonvalve.
Most homemade pistonvalves are scaled after QEV's.
I'll use them as an example.
Those QEV's have a large diameter piston yet a fairly small port.
This makes them very sensitive.
A property that makes them perfect for draining aircilinders.
When it comes to pushing an object out of a short barrel with the highest possible velocity at the other end however, priorities aren't the same.
You want full opening as fast as possible, utilising every mm of barrellength for acceleration.
The "out"port shouldn't pertrue into the T-valve too much either.
Right over the reservoir port or even a hair to the front will provide unrestricted flow.
Another downside to QEV's.
It requires a 180 turn for the air to rush out.
I wondered about that. I know the beauty of this type of valve is the radical pressure differential once the piston opens the tiniest bit.
I appreciate the input and the explanation. I am still relatively green in this hobby, so any input is appreciated.
As for valveless, don't even get me started!
I think the only downside to that is the limited ammo that could be used. But, the performance would be insane!
Oh, also, sealing would be difficult at the pressure I will be running.
Matt
Exotic E-bike builder, air cannon builder, and overall crack-pot. ;~)