OK I'm dense...I don't get your ignition method there. Looks like an old cannon prick/fuse hole but I know that wont hold up to pressurized hybrids. What's going on there?
Yes, I'm still awaiting the watermelon shot...

I have a chronystarman wrote:Good job on your return to hybriding! Very solid machine there...great sound!! You must get a chrony or even an acoustic velocity measurement.
OK I'm dense...I don't get your ignition method there. Looks like an old cannon prick/fuse hole but I know that wont hold up to pressurized hybrids. What's going on there?
Yes, I'm still awaiting the watermelon shot...
I can't allow it to rust down, now it is in a pretty practical condition.SpudBlaster15 wrote:I knew you'd eventually regain the urge fire this launcher; it's a miracle you haven't blown off any fingers pursuing "other" interests.
SpudBlaster15 wrote:SpudFarm wrote:One more, hybrid topics needs to be bumped since no one looks at them otherwise.
Yeah, it's kind of a shame that hybrid cannons aren't more popular. In the 6 years this site has been around, only 96 topics have been posted in this forum, which equates to about 1 cannon per month. Compare that to the combustion showcase, which gets one new topic every ~3 days, and the pneumatic showcase, which averages nearly a cannon per day. Complex launchers just don't appeal to many people.
What camera did you use to film the recent golf ball shot? Casio EX-F1? Supersonic golf balls sure look great at 1200 frames per second.
I will try to do the marble grapeshot tomorrow. Might be a problem that they break in the barrel, hope they break before denting my barrel...SpudBlaster15 wrote:I'd love to see steel ball bearing or marble grapeshot filmed at 1200fps.
I can't have a "down the barrel" view because of the smoke from the muzzle.SpudBlaster15 wrote:For the angle, maybe have the camera set up near the end of the barrel, aimed slightly downrange. Hopefully, that would allow it to effectively capture both the cluster of rounds exiting the barrel, and the spread pattern as the marbles travel toward the target.
I can't use the zoom to much since it decrease the light sensitivity. I always try to use as high shutter speed as possible.CpTn_lAw wrote:I'd say far behind, zoomed in but still allowing to see barrel, focused on the target. That gives the best result IMO... I will be able to make a video comparaison, of a single marble filmed at 1200 fps, just for scientific purpose ^^
CpTn_lAw wrote:you know you can do a 60 fps photo capture and set the shutter speed to be very very high? this will (granted with a little chance) hopefully give very good full-res results.
(I did that two years ago and it worked)