A couple of thoughts on the issues of liners and PMVs . . . lots of bad info out there, much of it spread by one who refers himself an airgun scientist, but is really more of a marketing dude . . .
On liners, they are probably a good idea, but even without one it's not like the cylinder is just going to explode or anything. If your filter does not use one, simply inspect the inside of the tube each time you change desiccant and if you see any discoloration, take action. And if you change media before it gets saturated, there will likely be no issue anyways. And if you want to use one, as already stated, simply make your own and add it in there. Not a bad idea.
On PMVs, it is important to know that desiccants will work fine at lower pressures - if you doubt it, weigh out a sample and leave it out in the open at atmospheric pressure and then weigh it again a day later. The statements that the filters "won't work" at lower pressure (thus without a PMV) are simply wrong. What is true is that in the "right situation" a PMV can increase the efficiency of a desiccant filter, and they do this through increased dwell time via reduced flow rate through the media. Multi stage air compressors basically put out a constant volume of atmospheric air regardless of output pressure, and thus the flow rate (and thus inversely the dwell time) through a given filter is higher when the pressure is lower, and lower when the pressure is higher.
So the "right situation" for needing a PMV is when filling a reservoir from empty (or at least close to it). As airgunners, we almost always fill to reservoirs that already have at least 100 bar or more in them - maybe one fill out of hundred (or less) is from empty (especially if we fill tanks from our compressors, and the tanks fill the guns). For breathing air (SCUBA and firefighting), the opposite is true - almost every fill is from close to empty, as divers try to maximise the time they have underwater with each tank (maybe not as much with fife fighters - they want to get out of the fire as soon as they can). These situations are where a PMV is highly beneficial, and should be used. Filters with PMVs are common in the dive industry. They don't hurt anything in an airgunning application, but are not beneficial or needed. If one is worried about that one in a hunder fill from low pressure, simply realize that each subsequent fill (with more fully dired air) after it will dilute out any small water vapor level that got through the first part of that initial fill - nothing much to worry aobut, unless you plan to fill the reservoir and then simply store it unused for a long time (and even that case is worlds better than the folks that fill without the use of a desiccant filter at all).
The attempt to convince airgunners that we
need a PMV in their filter is purely marketing - cynically, the process of convincing someone that they need to purchase something that they don't really need . . .