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Air Trigger
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In November of 2002 I decided to
develop an
air
cannon using a washing machine valve as the trigger and went on a quest to
find a more secure method of sending the air in. What I found makes a $1 water
valve as simple to use to trigger air as any $65 professional pneumatic
solenoid. Here are the details.
Of course you will need a water valve from a washing machine and not
just any valve will hold the air back and reseat itself under
the rather high pressure I would
need for an air cannon. I wound up
testing many, many different valves to see which work and which don't. There are
two that I have had success with at high pressure such as what my
Aerial
Executioner operates at, some
85 lbs. Shown above is Horton C539 / n-6042
which not only worked well, but
actually have larger inner porting,
so the sound it produced for the
cannon was slightly superior
to the rest. The other valve that
worked well as the N-51 as shown here. The first one (translucent white) is very
difficult to find, but the N-51 is readily available at any appliance repair
shop used or even from a scrap yard that recycles old washing machines for the
scrap metal. It will cost you about $3 from the repair shop or $1 from the scrap
yard. Be CERTAIN you get the
Horton or the
N-51! There are lots of other valves
out there that look identical to the blue one above, but they are
N-50s and DO
NOT WORK under high pressure. Look carefully before driving all the way
home. |
Note;
I have
received many emails saying that
they couldn't find any of these
over the phone calling repair
places and parts desks. I need to
mention here that this is a part
that you will have to get in your
car and go hunt down, due to it's
low value / high pain in the butt
ratio to the repair men. So here's my
best tip; you will definitely be able to find these things if you go to the city
landfill or scrap yard as mentioned above. Every time I go there I can pick up at least two or
three or more. Things to take with you to the landfill; large channel lock pliers to get the old water lines off the valve, flat blade screw driver to undo the exit water line, crescent wrench to remove the valve from the washing machine, a rag to clean your hands with after and a plastic grocery bag to put the valves in. Simple. It only takes roughly 2 minutes to remove these and they are really easy to get at, so don't worry about it.
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We have covered the attaining of
the water valve so now it is time
to get the rest of the goodies
needed to make this funny looking
doowhacky into something that
releases the fear of God into your
hapless TOTs. |
(1) Female
Hose to FIP Swivel fitting 3/4" x 1/2" = $3.97
(Home Depot)
(1) Hose end cap = $.53 (Home Depot)
(1) 1/2 to 1/4" Galvanized reducer bushing = $.76 (Home Depot)
(1) 1/4" IID male air coupler = $.49 (Harbor Freight)
(1) 6' Extension cord = $.77 (WalMart)
(2) 1/4" Female Quick Slide, 18 ga. crimp cord fittings $.09 ea = $.18
(Harbor Freight)
(1) Washing machine water valve = $3.00
Total = $9.70
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This is simple business. Spin your
hose end cap on to the water inlet
you will not be using and tighten
with a large pair of pliers so it
is more than just finger tight. The
same for the hose swivel fitting to
the chamber that you are using.
Attach the air coupler to the
reducer and the reducer to
the swivel using Teflon plumber’s
tape. You will need to bring power
to
the water valve as it runs on 110V,
so chop the female end off your
extension cord and clamp female
quick slide fitting to the end of
each of the two leads. Slip on to
either lead on
the solenoid that triggers your
water valve and then cover each
with heat-shrink tubing or
electrical tape. It does not matter
which power cord lead you send to
which connector. Either way will
work as long as you attach your air
nipple to the corresponding
cylinder .
And here is how it will look when
completed. The top of this photo
got cut off, but you can see that
3/8" air hose slips perfectly over
the outlet nipple for feeding the
air to your prop. And that's it!
Here is an old photo of the completed system (using the previous method of forcing
the PVC pipe end caps on which were tapped with threads for the air fitting) put together for the
Exorcist
that illustrates well how this will be used. I attached the air line from the
compressor to one end of an air regulator and attached the out directly to a
threaded fitting going into the solenoid. The air out of the water valve is
hose-clamped on for a positive fit. For opening the air way to your
pneumatic event you will merely send power down the power cord. Once released
the air travels to a three way connector that will split the air to the air cylinder
as well as out to a muffler fitted at the end of about 5 feet of line. You can
see there is an air valve to the muffler line because we will be dialing in the
exact amount of bleed that allows our pneumatic prop to reset.
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Own this
convention
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