
The design won't be the king of efficiency, but it's the only way I can think of that would allow air to be pumped in and air to fire out the same opening. When the sabot is done pumping and the second valve is opened, everything behind the primary valve becomes the PC, so I'll have to glue this thing religiously. With that in mind, it is possible that the PC could be shaped differently to make the gun more compact.
There is some uncertainty as to the worthwhileness of the design. In theory it would pressurize faster than a bike pump because the sabot moves much more air per stroke. However, you can really slam it in with a floor pump, so what happens when the pressure gets high, would it be too difficult to shove the sabot down? Pringles cans are not known for durability, especially since you have to cut off the rim for it to slide better. You also have to pump this hard and fast to force the check valve to open, the only ones I have for PVC are meant for water. A prelim test verified that the valve will indeed open, but you do need to shove that sabot fast.
The main plus is that it saves you the need to spend $40 on a good floor pump or $60 if you want a pump that will actually last more than one season. If you have multiple WBLs, but not multiple pumps, it could be a viable option if it ends up generating enough pressure. I am anticipating not being able to put in as much as a bike pump, so this would be a shorter range gun in the 200-300ft range (G2 Douchenator maxes out around 800ft).