Short question topic
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- Sergeant
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Does anyone know how much pressure I can use in this mapp gas can?
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The one they gave me has no label or inscription of any kind. I've searched the web, but the data is elusive. They only talk about the characteristics of gas for welding
- mrfoo
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OK, just had a look. The cans themselves aren't stamped. Label states 22 bar for the contents, so you're almost certainly safe up to there. That's for the old-style MAPP canisters with methylacetylene-propadeine rather than the less energetic propylene-propane mix they use these days.
Those cans do come with a handy fill valve that you're obviously not supposed to use.
Those cans do come with a handy fill valve that you're obviously not supposed to use.
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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MAPP gas has a vapor pressure of around 200 psi at 30 degrees celcius so you should be more than fine at this pressure.hectmarr wrote:OK understood. I'm just going to inflate to 200 psi, no more, it has to endure well. Thanks for your reply.
PDF report of these bottles being abused in the name of health and safety
If I understood correctly, working pressure for the MAPP bottle is listed as 13 bar or 189 psi.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jrrdw
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Are you asking how to sight it in?hectmarr wrote:Does anyone have information on how to aim with a sight of the reflex type, or red dot? I mean how the firing cannon is aligned towards the target.
- farcticox1
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Like this I guess, I have 2 but haven't used them yet.
[youtube][/youtube]
[youtube][/youtube]
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What I do not understand, is how it is possible to align the firing cannon, with a single point ... To draw a line you need at least two points, as in open sights with a rise and point. These sights only show one point (red or green or the color they have).jrrdw wrote:Are you asking how to sight it in?hectmarr wrote:Does anyone have information on how to aim with a sight of the reflex type, or red dot? I mean how the firing cannon is aligned towards the target.
They offer me one of medium quality at a low price, and that is why I like to know how the hell you can aim with that. I'm with the video, I hope to understand. Thanks guysfarcticox1 wrote:Like this I guess, I have 2 but haven't used them yet.
[youtube][/youtube]
- farcticox1
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I'm thinking the red dot is actually a beam of light, 1st fixed point is where it hits the reflector and the 2nd is where it hits you're eye, like a reverse laser pointer but not strong enough to blind you.
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For this reason the name of the reflex system is clear.farcticox1 wrote:I'm thinking the red dot is actually a beam of light, 1st fixed point is where it hits the reflector and the 2nd is where it hits you're eye, like a reverse laser pointer but not strong enough to blind you.
I'm going to buy it, to know exactly what this type of aiming machine is about, and try it. It is for a co2 gun, to aim quickly at short distances up to 10 or 12 meters.
- mrfoo
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If you're playing at 12 meters, 1 arc minute (one click) is equivalent to 3.5mm.
Comes from trigonometry. SOH CAH TOA ,if you remember your schoolin'. For a right angled triangle, the tangent of one of the non-right angles is equal to the length of the side opposite that angle divided by the adjacent side. One arc-minute is equal to 1/60 degree (and an arc-second is equal to 1/60 arc-minute).
tan (1 / 60) = offset / distance to target
thus
offset = distance to target * tan (1/60)
Obviously, you need to choose units to fit the likely offset, which will mean upscaling your distance to target - 12m = 12000mm.
Comes from trigonometry. SOH CAH TOA ,if you remember your schoolin'. For a right angled triangle, the tangent of one of the non-right angles is equal to the length of the side opposite that angle divided by the adjacent side. One arc-minute is equal to 1/60 degree (and an arc-second is equal to 1/60 arc-minute).
tan (1 / 60) = offset / distance to target
thus
offset = distance to target * tan (1/60)
Obviously, you need to choose units to fit the likely offset, which will mean upscaling your distance to target - 12m = 12000mm.