paintballHomepaintballPicturespaintballTechnicalpaintballTournamentpaintballRecreationalpaintballFieldspaintballStorespaintball
paintballBeginner InfopaintballNews And ArticlespaintballLinkspaintballResourcespaintballVideopaintballContact UspaintballSearchpaintball
WARPIG Tank Talk

Shooting a gun remotely


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ WARPIG Tank Talk ]

Posted by:
Silentdoh
on October 23, 2003 at 00:18:50

I would like to mount a paintgun to a plate so the gun sits up right on the plate without a trigger or grip frame. I already have a circuit that I am designing to make the gun go up and down with a servo and will make the gun go left and right with a motor. But I don't have a good way to make the the gun shoot.

So far some ideas I have been given is to get an original shocker because it has a switch to make the gun fire. Problem is I don't have shocker I have a spyder shutter. I was planning on using for this project. This particular spyder doesn't have any electronics on it either.
The other thing people have said is to hook a cam up to a cordless drill and actuate the trigger with the cam.

I don't want to use the trigger if possible is there a way to do this with pnuematics?

Any help with this will be apreciated
Thanks,
Silentdoh



Follow Ups:


Post a Followup

Show your name as:

E-Mail address (eg: joeschmoe@aol.com):


Show your e-mail address?

Your Password:


Don't have a password? CLICK HERE - Forgot your password? CLICK HERE

Subject:

Subject:Message:


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ WARPIG Tank Talk ]


Copyright © 1992-2019 Corinthian Media Services.

WARPIG's webmasters can be reached through our feedback form.  All articles and images are copyrighted and may not be redistributed without the written permission of their original creators and Corinthian Media Services. The WARPIG paintball page is a collection of information and pointers to sources from around the internet and other locations. As such, Corinthian Media Services makes no claims to the trustworthiness or reliability of said information. The information contained in, and referenced by WARPIG, should not be used as a substitute for safety information from trained professionals in the paintball industry.