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December 26th, 2012, 13:21 | #16 | |
Harvester of Noobs' Sorrow
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Quote:
rubber BBs could be very interesting. if they are made from stiff enough rubber, they would not compress in the barrel, but would still survive impacting a hard surface. that could mean reusable BBs, but that economic model would not fly with the BB manufacturers. impact force calculations would stay the same. a soft rubber BB would not compress laterally, but around the axis of rotation due to the hopup induced back spin. it could amplify the hop effect and make for a more stable BB flight.
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Weapons Technician / Gunsmith Don't look at me, I don't know, lol ¯\(°_o)/¯. Last edited by Dynamo; December 26th, 2012 at 13:23.. |
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December 26th, 2012, 15:37 | #17 | |
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December 26th, 2012, 17:03 | #18 | |
aka coachster
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December 26th, 2012, 17:08 | #19 |
Prancercise Guru
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I think by the time you reached a hardness in the rubber that would feed properly from a full magazine and fly through the barrel you would find they were about as hard as a plastic BB.
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Airsoft, where nothing is hurt but feelings. |
December 26th, 2012, 17:17 | #20 | |
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Awhile ago RAP4 was flirting around with a rubber/plastic bb with fins but I think the concept died not long after its launch. |
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December 26th, 2012, 17:18 | #21 | |
formerly steyr
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In a rubber BB (or any other material, really) if an elastic collision occurs the BB returns to its original shape after collision. Yes, it may deform during the collision but the definition of elastic collision means that when all is said and done it returns to its original shape. This means that none of the impact energy is absorbed in the BB, thus more is transferred into the other object involved in the collision (your face, teeth, goggles etc). Another example of an elastic collision in airsoft would be with BBs made of silica. That being said, the rubber BBs would subject the target to less overall stress (force over area) due to deformation during impact resulting in a larger impact surface area. It would still suck though. The best example I can think of is, two objects same size and weight. One is a pool ball, one is an orange. What would you rather get hit with? (golf ball core vs crab apple etc...) Last edited by Wrath144; December 26th, 2012 at 17:21.. |
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December 26th, 2012, 21:53 | #22 |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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This won't work
some mags have a hard enough time feeding perfectly smooth surfaced BBs, now imagine 70 rounds in your mag all applying friction at a 30 degree staggering angle away from your feed lips. Yeah, nothing is moving anywhere lol Also, deformation will occur when the air nozzle picks the BB up from the mag, during full auto it would cause the BB to distort through the barrel, and if the air nozzle engages partially, it may tear the BB or jam it down the barrel, causing a blockage that may be very difficult to take out. Rubber on rubber is a bad idea, so you'll need to make a hard & smooth hop engagement, and minor distortion isn't going to just slow the BB a little bit, any ricocheting of a BB with a grippy surface down the barrel will reduce it's speed to almost nothing over an extremely short distance. And with distortion set up from the hop, I just can't see these things flying very straight at all |
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