cockerpunk, on 30 June 2011 - 01:38 PM, said:
Y positive is backwards
i guess i was wrong, probably want to edit that

thanks!
guess that changes things a bit. Makes sense though - the first major spike would be the rammer. It's up - meaning it's pushing the rig back. makes sense.
paintballjla, on 30 June 2011 - 02:05 PM, said:
I would like to see the same gun tested again at a different time, because my fear with using hands it that a persons grip my change from day to day and begin of testing to end, as there hand gets tired ect.
the fact that there was incredibly minimal change shot to shot when holding the gun indicates that the hand holding system is very repeatable. As to whether there is an overall, low frequency shift in data from shooter reaction isn't clear.
paintballjla, on 30 June 2011 - 02:05 PM, said:
Besides the weight is not going to be the same for each shot anyways unless you are counting each paintball and not just having a pod of paint and "full tank" of air for each, if you are so worried about weight then do you count each paintball in the hopper and then add another each shot, and do you refill the tank up to the same pressure after each shot?
we did add paintballs to bring the count back up after chrono and after every couple shots. The rigs with tank, hopper, paint and gun all weighed upwards of 8 pounds. Each ball shot weighs something near .007 pounds. Each shot off the tank uses up about 1/1500th of the air in the tank. So 5 shots would change the rig weight by about .4%. Assuming that mass has a liner relationship to recoil (which we'll examine) that's pretty much nothing. even 50 shots in is pretty minor.
paintballjla, on 30 June 2011 - 02:05 PM, said:
And i my be reading the wrong but it appears that you have take data in only the foward back ward direction would it be possible to get more data form the test. i.e. more accelerometers placed in other places to measure other directions. and on other parts of the gun to see just how much the placement of the accelerometer changes the data.
yes, we plan a ton of tests.
As to future testing - we've got several dozen ideas. Everyone please feel free to keep suggesting new ones.