DO NOT BLOCK THIS OR, BLOCK IT WITH SOMETHING FRAGILE. I discovered the hard way that a metal washer was a bad idea. I'm still working on it but I may have ruined my CS2. It appears the metal washer went into the pump somehow (I thought it was too large) and is now stuck in the piston to cylinder gap. The piston will not current move which is preventing disassembly to be completed so I can assess the damage. If I can get it apart it may be recoverable but the best idea is to not block this hole with anything that would damage the compressor if it went into it. Or just do not block it. My original idea was bad.
I was checking the grease in my almost new CS2 and took off the head and pulled the inspection plug. I was surprised the inspection plug had a hole about 1/4 inch in it. So the piston area was open. That doesn't seem right so I made a plug out of a washer and a little Epoxy. I also took the grease out of that area and replaced it with some from Target Forge. Letting air in that area can also admit grit and thus premature wear. I wonder if a part got left out or something. The head bolts were also Very tight. I used an old Ryobi impact. I think my pump is OK but I'm glad I caught this early in it's life.
I was checking the grease in my almost new CS2 and took off the head and pulled the inspection plug. I was surprised the inspection plug had a hole about 1/4 inch in it. So the piston area was open. That doesn't seem right so I made a plug out of a washer and a little Epoxy. I also took the grease out of that area and replaced it with some from Target Forge. Letting air in that area can also admit grit and thus premature wear. I wonder if a part got left out or something. The head bolts were also Very tight. I used an old Ryobi impact. I think my pump is OK but I'm glad I caught this early in it's life.
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