Acceleration of air threw a funnel

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The discussion centers on the release of compressed air from a cylindrical chamber through a tube, questioning the initial velocity of the air. At 4,000 psi, the air exits at the speed of sound, approximately 1,100 feet per minute, indicating choked flow conditions. The potential impact of a funnel-shaped design on velocity was explored, with insights suggesting that a diverging section could enhance speed. However, it was concluded that the existing design of the air rifle likely already optimizes exit velocity, making further modifications unnecessary. Ultimately, the horn-shaped funnel does not provide the expected acceleration benefits.
Ed Lenarduzzi
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You have a cylindrical chamber with a 5cm ID and 55cc capacity filled to 4,000psi of air at 70*F and want to released the air threw a tube of .5cm ID. What's the initial velocity (in fps please) as the air leaves the chamber's end directly threw the .5cm tube? What's the initial velocity as the air leaves the same chamber end if it's shaped like a funnel for say half the length of the chamber out the .5cm tube? I don't know what it's called but the funnel is horn shaped. No real accuracy is required as it mostly a hypothetical question.
Thanks, Ed.
 
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Welcome to PF!

At that pressure, there is only one answer: the speed of sound (about 1100 fpm).

Also, you don't actually intend to do this, do you? It is very dangerous.
 
russ_watters said:
Welcome to PF!

At that pressure, there is only one answer: the speed of sound (about 1100 fpm).

Also, you don't actually intend to do this, do you? It is very dangerous.

Thank you for your concern but it's done all the time with precharged pneumatic air rifles. In fact this rifle shot a pellet near mach 2.
My real question is how much faster would it have gone if the air chamber had a funnel horn before the barrel or would it have made any difference at all.
 
I don't have a post secondary education so I don't know if I asked an impossibly difficult question.
Perhaps this is the sort of question that's more easily answered by an experimentation that math.
 
And what he is saying is that with that sort of pressure, the answer is simply that the flow will be moving with the local speed of sound. It will be what we call choked flow. The local sound speed, in turn, will depend on the temperature. The only way you could give it a faster velocity would be to add a diverging section.
 
boneh3ad said:
And what he is saying is that with that sort of pressure, the answer is simply that the flow will be moving with the local speed of sound. It will be what we call choked flow. The local sound speed, in turn, will depend on the temperature. The only way you could give it a faster velocity would be to add a diverging section.
The air must be going faster than the speed of sound if it is driving a pellet out the muzzle at 2,031fps.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWt5DnfYH3I&feature=player_embedded
 
That would imply that the design features a diverging section already.
 
boneh3ad said:
That would imply that the design features a diverging section already.
I don't know if you saw the video I included in my last message but it might show a 'diverging section' not that I don't know what that means.
Ed.
 
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Ed Lenarduzzi said:
I don't know if you saw the video I included in my last message but it might show a 'diverging section' not that I don't know what that means.
Ed.
This:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Laval_nozzle

I (we) suspect that this air rifle has already been carefully engineered for optimum exit velocity. Re-shaping the throat is unlikely to help increase the velocity.
 
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Thank you so much gentleman. Your answers confirmed what I've already been told on the Canadian Airgun Forum.
http://www.airgunforum.ca/forums/topic71812.html
Apparently I was wrong that a horn shaped funnel would help accelerate the air through the barrel.
Ed.
 
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