BothMy curiosity got the better of me and I have just tested mine in water and zero leakage! Was yours tested with dry fire or outside with a pellet?
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BothMy curiosity got the better of me and I have just tested mine in water and zero leakage! Was yours tested with dry fire or outside with a pellet?
Actually… almost lolSee post #40 Think I got it![]()
lol my poor attempted an arrow was pointing at the daylight through the bottom. Indicating that’s the hole that is possibly the culprit to my wowe’sDon't understand what arrow is pointing at ?
But yes, pressure within throat during shot can very much travel around body of seat and I.D. of housing going out the hole that factory "Is Not" blanking/sealing where transfer path is drilled in manifold during manufacturing.
Perhaps tap the lower hole if enough meat is there w/o interfering with seat, or having housing fit frame and screw in a plug ( Say a shallow 1/8-27 NPT )
inside 10 min on bench we have a fix ...lol my poor attempted an arrow was pointing at the daylight through the bottom. Indicating that’s the hole that is possibly the culprit to my wowe’s
Wouldn’t a BSP thread do a better job of Sealing without having to use any kind of Teflon tape?
Or would that be the wrong type of application for a BSP thread?
Um….. can you make me one lolYou had reminded me of seeing this issue a couple years ago, but never noted an air leak .... Thowas not chasing one either.
Makes no sense factory did not address this ? As air path integrity is reliant on the near zero/zero fit of seat into housing in not having air pass around the seat ( Between o-rings ) and exit out this hole.
Done .... @ 5min to spin off another while size numbers were in my head.Um….. can you make me one lol
soooo much better than epoxy lol
I can pay you![]()
inside 10 min on bench we have a fix ...
For you self doers ...
If you have a lathe ? .... super simple part.
O.D. is .348"
O-ring groove @ .080" wide by @ .060" deep
O-ring an SAE #011 buna
OAL @ .170"
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That Piece is left open from the factory on purpose. If the valve seat develops a small leak, it gives the air somewhere to bleed to, so if someone accidently left a round chambered, pressure will not build up behind it and shoot the round.You had reminded me of seeing noting this potential issue a couple years ago tho forgot all about it never noting an air leak .... Thowas not chasing one either.
Makes no sense factory did not address this ? As air path integrity is reliant on the near zero/zero fit of seat into housing in not having air pass around the seat ( Between o-rings ) and exit out this hole.
If the valve seat starts to leak, even slightly, that means air could be escaping even at low pressure—which is definitely something to keep in mind. That said, as sensitive as the Skout triggers are, if we’re walking around with a round chambered, we probably need to be more concerned about our own gun safety habits than any mechanical risk.That Piece is left open from the factory on purpose. If the valve seat develops a small leak, it gives the air somewhere to bleed to, so if someone accidently left a round chambered, pressure will not build up behind it and shoot the round.
In reflection to that statementThat Piece is left open from the factory on purpose. If the valve seat develops a small leak, it gives the air somewhere to bleed to, so if someone accidently left a round chambered, pressure will not build up behind it and shoot the round.