I've been out of town for a little over a week and my rifle has lost 30 bar of pressure from the 480cc bottle. Is this something normal and expected, or do I have to find and fix a slow leak?
I've got a pcp that's been been filled for over 8 years, been fired a few times and refilled, and hasn't leaked. And it's a tube gun.None of mine (8) leak down, even over months. The only time I have had a leak, the issue fell under what Gerry52 described.
Never heard of CRC before this... Seems a messy, expensive way to test for leaks!Thermal expansion and contraction can account for some pretty serious movement.
Not 30 bar tho. Buy a can of crc aerosol leak checker
lots of "it depends"I've been out of town for a little over a week and my rifle has lost 30 bar of pressure from the 480cc bottle. Is this something normal and expected, or do I have to find and fix a slow leak?
curious... why would you take the fill nozzle out of a brand new airgun?Dang, you all are confirming what I thought. Unfortunately it's a new gun, a Daystate Blackwolf. The only thing I've done that could be related to this is I took the fill nozzle completely out. I'll check that first.
It's definitely under warranty but I am not excited about the idea of sending it back to get checked.
I was degassing it to lower the regulator and wanted to be sure it was empty. And I don't know what I'm doing.curious... why would you take the fill nozzle out of a brand new airgun?
Then you could have either nicked one of the o rings or maybe they didn't seat properly while reassembling. If the gun didn't leak beforehand then you now know exactly which seals to check. Use some silicone grease and lube the rings and reassemble the gun.I was degassing it to lower the regulator and wanted to be sure it was empty. And I don't know what I'm doing.
Thanks, I'll go get some silicone grease and give it a go.Then you could have either nicked one of the o rings or maybe they didn't seat properly while reassembling. If the gun didn't leak beforehand then you now know exactly which seals to check. Use some silicone grease and lube the rings and reassemble the gun.
Also keep in mind that it's good practice to always lube the seals. You reduce the chance of them not seating well when you assemble the gun.
That’s why I’m glad when I got serious about PCP’s I bought a Snowpeak PP700 and worked on that extensively before cracking open one of my premium PCPs.I was degassing it to lower the regulator and wanted to be sure it was empty. And I don't know what I'm doing.
That's the point. It's not messy or reactive like soap can be. It's right there and ready for you to use before a forum post. It lasts forever and doesn't leave a residue. If more people knew of it the activity on agn might drop 20%Never heard of CRC before this... Seems a messy, expensive way to test for leaks!
I use these with a bit of soapy water in them...
A slow leak doesn't leak very quickly, a tiny bubble now and then is typical when one of my Streamlines was loosing 20 BAR over a week.I don't really know what I'm doing, but I have a bottle of Snoop fluid. I put some around the threads of the fill nozzle, no bubbles. Same with around the air bottle attachment, the regulator gauge, and the bottle gauge. I assume that the bubbles would appear immediately if there was a leak?