I'm curious to hear tell your findings. I have found my own but wanted to hear from others first.
PCP & springer.
PCP & springer.
You have to define serious cold. Make it cold enough and military lubricants begin to fail in PBs.
If 16 deg F is cold I can say the only effect it had on my PRod was # of shots. I filled to 3000 in house and once sitting in the woods after a few hours it was reading 2600psi. I had no problem shooting the gun, or hitting the squirrel I was aiming at.
If 16 deg F is cold I can say the only effect it had on my PRod was # of shots. I filled to 3000 in house and once sitting in the woods after a few hours it was reading 2600psi. I had no problem shooting the gun, or hitting the squirrel I was aiming at.
It’s not that the cold gives you less shots, it’s that the PSI reading on the gauge is in relation to tank temperature at the time of fill. Conversely, when the ambient temperature rises to that when the tank was filled (to your ideal pressure) the PSI reading on the gauge would be the same as when you first filled it.
You have to define serious cold. Make it cold enough and military lubricants begin to fail in PBs.
No—I am saying you would get the same amount of shots that you initially filled the gun to when the ambient temperature rises to that of the tank at the time of fill. Of course, you would get only the number of shots that a lower pressure can provide.
Oil is another thing like already mentioned. After a deer hunt with my son durning Christmas, we headed for the house. Decided to stop at the pond and see if my Badger was still zeroed at 50. Pulled the trigger and nothing. As I raised my head from the scope, the rifle went off. A hang fire. Just like my old cap and ball muzzleloader. At 17*, the hammer froze to the wall. Finely the spring pressure let go the hammer. Glad it happened shortly after pulling the trigger and didn’t go off as I was lifting the rifle off the table.