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Thread: Educate me on Piston Weight

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  1. #1
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    There are too many variables to make general rules except:

    Heavier pellet needs heavier piston to work well.
    Efective piston weight is piston weight plus a third of the spring weight. A compressed coil at the spring guide end adds no weight but one at the top hat end adds all its weight (it acts like iit is part of the piston/top hat).
    Heavier pistons and pellets can get away with smaller transer ports.
    Heavier pistons mean more power but also more recoil.

  2. #2
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    Here's an animation and some writing that fills in some details

    http://www.arld1.com/images/swfs/pis...etdynamics.swf

  3. #3
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    Pretty much as per posts 2, 3 and 4.

    Also from my understanding, whilst a heavier piston may result in higher initial recoil, if a lighter piston was to induce more piston bounce, it's this surge recoil that is the most detrimental to accuracy.

    It's far too easy to generalise, as said above, and each individual set up, in terms of bore, stroke, TP volume, spring etc will have a different "balance point". Some will have pistons which are too heavy for any configuration.

    And then you remember the reports of how good those ally-piston TXs are!!!!

    I suppose that, if you go too light, this can always be easily addressed by fitting internal weights.....

    Gotta go out now.......
    THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
    NEXT EVENT :- August 3/4, 2024.........BOING!!

  4. #4
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    Blackbeard..

    So a question for Mr Blackbeard if I may....

    If there any point at which a reduction in piston weight cannot be compensated for by more spring ?

    E.g. today I had a 75mm stroke, 25mm bore TX with a 5.5 x 3.8 port, full length (13") .177. Set to about 11.6, but more initial recoil than I wanted. No slam, just right in that respect.

    I reduced the piston weight (by est around 35-45 grams), and power dropped to around 9 FP. I then stuffed in a spring (had to be trimmed 'cos it was initially oversprung) and got back to exactly the same power, (which is believe it pretty close to the limit for this stroke in this gun) - also without slam. Noticeably less recoil and faster, but (obviously) more cocking effort. However as the spring is longer, with more preload (essential to counteract the bounce with the slighter piston), I'm not sure whether the total energy delivery by the spring is that much higher then before (i.e. the work done in compression), or if it's just a perception due to the higher initial cocking effort.

    The question then being, beyond hitting practical limits of how much spring you can actually fit in the gun before it gets coilbound, is there some point when power becomes much harder to compensate for with a stronger/longer spring when reducing piston weight ? I'm guessing it's non-linear in some fashion, but you are the man for the models

    Cheers - JB

  5. #5
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    Set up model to your initial spec. Only noticable thing is a low cylinder gap.

    Reduced piston weight to 235g and preload up 4mm to compensate...

    Cylinder gap down a little, cylinder pressure up from 107 to 123 bar. Recoil energy and movement are down but recoil forces are up. Bigest drop is in recoil movement.

    Piston weight down to 200g, preload up some more

    Less cylinder gap, increased pressure again, even less recoil movement.

    Piston weigh down to 150g, preload up some more

    Piston almost crashing, pressure up to 195 bar, recoil movement down to about half the original. Recoil will be very fast and piston has a fast impact at the end of its final stroke.

    Piston weight 100g

    Can't get it above 9.4ftb without piston crashing and need less preload. Pressure 236 bar but goes to stupid levels if preload is pushed up beyond crashing point. Reducing TP to 2.8mm lets me increase the power before it crashes to 10.6ftlb by reducing lost volume (gives 316 bar!). Fair bit of back flow in the transfer port when the pellet is most of the way down the barrel.

    Piston weight 75g

    Only getting a few ftlb before piston crashes.
    But by cheating I can get it up to 11ftlb. This involves no extra lost volume (I was using 1/4 cc on the other runs) on the cylinder, 2.8mm transfer port and a pellet made from a material 1/4 the strength of steel (to stop it expanding under 512 bar).

    So the model suggests that there are limits due to the piston crashing or internal pressures getting too high. Go to far and you can't get the power due to lost volume or everything blowing up.

    Normal cautions apply- it isn't real and like all computer models, crap in = crap out.

    BB

  6. #6
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    I wonder if someone could eloquently try to explain the feeling or sensations of piston bounce, slam, twisting , etc.. alongside the physics of what is happening inside the gun?
    Donald

  7. #7
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    Excellent BB, really interesting, thanks for that.....

    I need some time to read that through a few times and have a think, but thanks for getting back...

    My initial thought from, which seems to correlate with what I'm seeing, is there is a sweet spot somewhere between 150g and 200g (but I think 200g is much more achievable) for reduced recoil movement...

    Thinking/reading....
    Last edited by Shed tuner; 11-03-2014 at 07:27 AM.

  8. #8
    lutonlad Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by thisisdonald View Post
    I wonder if someone could eloquently try to explain the feeling or sensations of piston bounce, slam, twisting , etc.. alongside the physics of what is happening inside the gun?
    I'd also like to know how people sense piston bounce, and piston slam.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Black Beard View Post
    Normal cautions apply- it isn't real and like all computer models, crap in = crap out.
    Maybe I have something for you to make (a part of) your model a little bit more realistic?
    https://www.dropbox.com/sc/z5umfyw4qsfnrst/cGlCX6IjQh

    ATB, Leo

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