jipe wrote:When there was a problem with the Anschutz rifle cylinders, the name of the manufacturer was mentioned. Same in the FWB document explaining the 10 year limit and the process to re-check the steel cylinders.Richard H wrote:Haven't been to Morini but I've watched the others manufacture the cylinders in house, where do you get your info from?
The cylinders are machined from aluminium billets.
The use of other suppliers for parts is not limited to the cylinders, many parts are manufactured and sometimes designed by sub-contractors. The most known one is the barrel with Lothar Walther.
This 10 years limit is just a matter of legal protection, the risk of people injuries in case of explosion is high. The risk that some cylinder explode is probably very low but the manufacturers cover themselves by setting a limit. ISSF does the same referring to the manufacturers rules.
About making money with cylinder replacement, if I remember well, I read that Walther offer a free cylinder replacement after 10 years for the new LP400 ?
Walther basically is making money you pay for both cylinders and the give you a second cylinder after you return your first one to them 10 years from now. If you think it's a good idea, send me $300 and I'll hold it for you for 10 years, while you're at it find thousands of others to do it too.
Jipe it about manufactures that didn't do what they were suppose to do, read the history of this thing. There were manufacturing defects that they SHOULD have caught if they were doing what they were SUPPOSE to be doing. Find me the data where they have failed from fatigue. The only other failure I heard of was a gauge blowing off a Morini cylinder ( it was relatively new top).
Jipe I won't believe my own lying eyes, I guess I didn't wath them make them in the plant and actually pick up the cylinders that were in various stages of completion..