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06-14-2019, 08:45 PM | #1 |
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Band Calculations
Here is a formula for calculating the length of the bands on any speargun, it is a trivial calculation once you understand the terminology.
BR is the Band Run length from band anchor position to rearmost shaft tab, or wishbone notch, which on a rollergun is a wraparound length taking in the top and bottom decks of the gun. The band run consists of lengths of rubber and cord or cable when the gun is fully cocked and the designer can vary the proportions of each to suit the power and cocking requirements for that gun. CL is the cord (or cable) length and is the combined length of the wishbone and anchor cords and wishbone cables, being half the length of the loops or as they are seen in profile when the gun is cocked. The longer the length of CL then the less rubber there is in the Band Run being stretched and the rest is made up of cord. SF the Stretch Factor is the degree of stretch required on the bands and is a number. Note we assume that the cords don’t stretch and that only the rubber length between the constrictor knots on the band ends actually stretches out. Any rubber outside the constrictor knots or wedding band rings is considered part of the cord length CL as it plays no part in spear propulsion, but it can influence wishbone lift if these ends skate along the top deck by wrapping hard against it when using soft wishbones and no in-line pull band elevators at the muzzle. X is the desired length of the slack bands that are to be stretched, you need to allow for an additional amount of rubber that lies beyond the constrictor knots and is often ground to a taper to improve hydrodynamic flow as the band contracts at high speed through the water. Note that X is the band strand length on each side of the gun, for loop or wraparound bands you double it. We can calculate X once we have BR from the gun layout and we then decide on an SF value that will not stretch the guts out of the bands as X = (BR - CL)/SF. Another concern is that you can cock it and how many times you expect to shoot and reload in a given session, no point is having a gun you cannot cock late in the dive as then big fish swim up and look at you, perhaps sensing that you are no longer a threat. Stretched band length is X multiplied by the stretch factor SF. After the shot we want the bands to return to length X unless they have been arranged to have some prestretch. If they don't when all stress is removed then they will need to be binned and replaced if other parameters are to be left unchanged, however bands can take some time to recover so they need to be checked the next day. Band Elongation is (X times SF – X)/X or X times (SF -1) and is expressed as a percentage. Stretched band length is slack length X plus band elongation (%) times X. So as you can see there is really nothing to it. Last edited by popgun pete; 06-16-2019 at 09:02 PM. Reason: added a cable rollergun diagram |
06-14-2019, 10:20 PM | #2 |
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Re: Band Calculations
Hey Pete Thank you for this.
I still have doubt i have a roller gun and my bands need to be replaced what stretch factor would I apply as a starting point. also I'm thinking of using 16 mm standard bands not small id Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk |
06-14-2019, 11:30 PM | #3 |
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Re: Band Calculations
You can always make bands shorter so maybe try a stretch factor of 3.5 or 250% elongation. Often a stretch factor of 4 or 300% elongation is quoted as a starting point, but you can also play with wishbone and anchor lengths to a certain extent. Another way to gauge your effort is to pass a length of the band rubber around something that will not budge and stretch it out by grabbing both ends. If you put some white marks on the band rubber with a chinagraph pencil or mark it with chalk at two points and then have someone measure the distance between the marks while you haul on it you can see what stretch you can achieve and at what effort. Don’t use a door handle as you might break it and rip the door off the hinge.
Last edited by popgun pete; 06-17-2019 at 04:14 PM. |
06-15-2019, 08:51 AM | #4 |
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Re: Band Calculations
Thanks, I think it would be helpful to more clearly define exactly what SF stretch factor is.
For example, if a single piece of latex is 12 inches long in a relaxed state and it is stretch to 24 inches, what is the SF? Is it 100% or 200%? It would be helpful to fill in the table below: Length SF 12 24 36
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06-15-2019, 09:23 AM | #5 |
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Re: Band Calculations
"Stretched band length is X multiplied by the stretch factor SF".
Length in the stretched state is original length plus the elongation as a percentage of the original length, i.e. X + X times Elongation % 12, not stretched. 24, SF is 2.0, Elongation is 100%, 12 + 12 times 1.0 = 24 36, SF is 3.0, Elongation is 200%, 12 + 12 times 2.0 = 36 |
06-16-2019, 04:18 PM | #6 |
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Re: Band Calculations
As a matter of interest here is a band gun where the Band Run BR is all rubber, the Mordem "Boreal". This gun uses a continuous loop band and a sliding spear pusher running in a track, no expense has been spared!
Last edited by popgun pete; 06-16-2019 at 05:56 PM. |
06-17-2019, 10:16 AM | #7 |
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Re: Band Calculations
Thats some goofy shit right there. Is there any advantage to all that friction?
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06-17-2019, 02:58 PM | #8 | |
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Re: Band Calculations
Quote:
However with a fat circular cross-section timber barrel and all that metal hardware at muzzle and butt this in-line band pull gun would be a stable shooter. Last edited by popgun pete; 06-19-2019 at 02:30 AM. Reason: added Saturno gun image circa 1969 models |
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06-21-2019, 12:20 AM | #9 |
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Re: Band Calculations
Of course Pete is right and the math is, too.
But one of the first things I noticed once I had to start cutting my own bands is how the spearo community in general has kinda decided that stretch factor and percentage wise stretch is one and the same. So, often when people talk about, say, 300% stretch they actually mean a factor of 3 which as Pete has explained is really only 200%. Perhaps that's why he made this thread, to try to "educate" people. |
06-21-2019, 04:28 AM | #10 |
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Re: Band Calculations
Hats off to you Pete! I’ve never heard of anyone using the term stretch factor but I think speaking this way could alleviate a lot of confusion.
While I was learning I found it very frustrating that some people call a band at rest at 100% or 0%. Hopefully this clears up some of that confusion and people pick up a standard that makes sense universally Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
06-21-2019, 04:32 AM | #11 | |
Shooter & Shooter
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Re: Band Calculations
Quote:
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06-21-2019, 04:40 AM | #12 |
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Re: Band Calculations
I feel like the reason “400% stretch” at SF of 4 became what I would consider the norm (at least where I live) is that the first number tells you stretch factor and less thinking is involved.
At least this clears it up for new folks. I believe at least wong and pathos guns speak in “ proper” elongation percentages and I remember being very confused when one of the two websites said 250% stretch was optimal for their guns Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
06-21-2019, 04:44 AM | #13 | |
Shooter & Shooter
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Re: Band Calculations
Quote:
I like the "the first number tells you stretch factor and less thinking is involved" explanation; 4 gives the factor and well, the two zeroes can just be thrown overboard. Last edited by Diving Gecko; 06-21-2019 at 05:52 AM. |
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06-21-2019, 09:30 AM | #14 |
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Re: Band Calculations
Band rubber needs to be used in the operating zone where it does not yield and becomes permanently elongated as the bands are required to repeatedly deliver the same performance on each shot. For that you need to use an elongation that they can recover from, although bands always stretch out a small amount with repeated use they eventually recover if used conservatively.
Primeline have a specifications page here: https://primelineindustries.com/spec...-57e9ca32-2028. Better to use more bands rather than stretch the guts out of them, but some bands are better than others as rubber batches can vary. |
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