My thoughts exactly, your buddy is lucky to have you as a friend….You did an awesome job cleaning it up![]()
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My thoughts exactly, your buddy is lucky to have you as a friend….You did an awesome job cleaning it up![]()
Love to help!THANK YOU
for protecting me from doing something really STUPID sometime down the line of my airgun hobby.
Matthias
I get dirty enough killing and cleaning iguanas as it is, can't tell.you how many work shirts I've had to throw away cause it was too much if a bloody messI think your hands are too clean to be working on airguns.![]()
Thank you! Glad to hear you got it fixed up as well without dunking!Wow! What a disaster. Good cleanup. I ordered a pcp conversion kit for a 22xx and had a leak. the vender told me to dunk the gun. Found the leak and fixed it without the dunk test. Glad to see that you where able to get it going.
Thank you! Even for more stubborn leaks, if you take yourself back, settle down, and have some patience. You'd find the leak, more often than not pcps with loads of moving parts and orings are the ones you would think to dunk underwater, 90% of airguns wouldn't need to be dunked at all and I definitely wouldn't lol.Nice job cleaning that up!
Why you would put the entire gun in the bathtub escapes me, but if you did, why wouldn't you take the thing apart and dry/clean/lube each part? And then, while you've got the damn thing apart, wouldn't you replace the seals when you put it back together? Why not skip the dunk altogether, tear the gun apart and replace all the seals?
I could see (possibly, for the most stubborn of leaks) dunking the pressure bearing parts in a bath of hot water to pinpoint the part and location of a leak that may be caused by a more serious sealing surface imperfection or damage. Hot water evaporates more readily than cold water, and testing only the parts that you need to would cut down on a lot of that damage. Definitely would be my last-resort option though as 99% of leaks are resolved by replacing all seals.
Thank you! There was s time where I used to think that you could dunk the higher end guns due to the better parts, even now I could never given what I have cleaned up on higher ends ones. But to dunk a Turkish gun and not even check!? Is insane.Ahhh!! Nooooo!! This pains my heart no end. I would NEVER have the stones to treat a gun like that. Use safe lubes to try to track air bubbles if need be , but not water.
Great reclamation though!![]()
Thanks for the kinds words! I checked the pcp and the gauge hasn't moved a bit! She's holding air just fine!My thoughts exactly, your buddy is lucky to have you as a friend….
Yeah, I didn't bother asking about rust when he initially told me about the gun having the problem weeks ago, his other boss for his other job supposedly knew what he was doing. Clearly not, but I also enjoying breaking down guns I haven't yet and seeing how they work. So although it took more time then originally thought it would, I'm not against it. Specially if I can get it working again, our boss isn't fond of cheaper guns, and he takes my judgement more serious about these matters, so I would've been fine in turning it down otherwise.Wow. Forest Gump's mom sure was right - stupid is as stupid does . . .
Whenever I've thought about the idea of "submerging a gun" to test for leaks, I had always assumed people were talking about submerging ONLY the parts that remain when stripped down to the pressure components - never the whole thing! I would prefer not to do even that, but I could see it if there was no other way to identify the leak - at least then there are limited parts to have to disassemble and fully dry. But literally the whole gun? Barrel, trigger group, hammer mechanism and all that too? Just wow . .
Nice work cleaning it up. I'd be tempted to say something like "sorry, but I can't waste my time fixing stupidity" and walk away from it (although tough to do with a boss involved).
Yeah, most are easy to spot. I think the main issue is people that lack the patience and know how that read a sentence and don't do further research specifically when being new to this and not having any experience with anything metal related.my Zbroia Kozak and Weihrauch HW 110 & 44 both have removal tanks/tubes complete with valve, as a unit , that is easily and safely dunked into a tub of water, without putting the whole gun in the drink,,, I am a dunker with them,,, [no darn doughnuts, bad seed oil in that garbage.]
my SPA P-15, is a 'no go', in the sink, but most of it's leaks can be spotted with a barrel balloon and with a little soapy water or leak detector fluid, no need to drown her
I work on airguns a lot. Never felt comfortable dunking them. I mean you'd need to completely disassemble and clean, so why no skip the dunking and disassemble, replace orings and fix the problem?
I've found that on dynamic orings it's best to go thru the whole gun and be done. Orings used as spacers, like in fx barrels it's up to you as those normally are fine.
Also CRC spray leak detect is your friend used judiciously.
I like Snoop brand leak detector
Nothing the CRC doesn’t corrode if left on. There is usually not much residue, but IPA or microfiber damp with water cleans it off.When you use these leak detectors, what kind of cleanup is required afterwards? I'm considering looking for a leak around my fill port.
I don’t want to detract from the OPs issues, but it’s a slow leak over several weeks. It does leak down below reg pressure but then stops around 50-60bar.Glad you asked, the LC don't have many places where they can leak from. Have you looked at the old Edgun West Videos? Does it have a slow leak or fast leak? Does it leaked to empty or does it stop at a certain psi?
That’s the one thing I have not tried. I’ll swap in another gauge and see if that does it.It’s probably the gauge. Not the gauge oring, the gauge itself. Been there with my Leshiy. And yes, I dunked it. It’s not a Notos.
I actually don't think it is, he just doesn't use it. So he never really looks at it, but every time he picks it up, it's empty.I don’t want to detract from the OPs issues, but it’s a slow leak over several weeks. It does leak down below reg pressure but then stops around 50-60bar.
That’s the one thing I have not tried. I’ll swap in another gauge and see if that does it.