Steyr LP10 Air Cylinder Questions
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Steyr LP10 Air Cylinder Questions
Does anyone know the cc volume of the long and short air cylinders?
Does anyone know of a way to unscrew the air cylinder from the fill adapter without losing a bunch of air? No matter how fast I try to unscrew it from the adapter, which is screwed into the K valve on my scuba tank, it seems like I lose a lot of air. Any way around this to keep a full charge?
Thanks,
Scrench
Does anyone know of a way to unscrew the air cylinder from the fill adapter without losing a bunch of air? No matter how fast I try to unscrew it from the adapter, which is screwed into the K valve on my scuba tank, it seems like I lose a lot of air. Any way around this to keep a full charge?
Thanks,
Scrench
- Brian Girling
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- Location: Staffordshire, United Kingdom
- markwarren
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Sun May 22, 2011 4:41 pm
- Location: Crewe, England, UK
not for Steyr
That works for Morini cylinders, but not for Steyr. Different valve setup.markwarren wrote:I have bought a fill adapter which allows you to bleed the system before you take the cylinder off. This means the cylinders is unscrewed without any pressure on the threads which personally I prefer. They are made by a company called Best Fittings here in the UK.
Good shooting
Mark
The difference may be minor, but it puts extra wear & tear on the threads. What's worse, as you unscrew the cylinder, the strength of the threaded connection goes down, as the force from the air is supported by fewer & fewer threads. Over time, this will tend to mess up the last couple threads on both the cylinder & the adapter.
Do you have an engineering background to support that statement, or are you just spouting hot air (as per usual)?
I said the difference may be minor, but the rest of my statement is not a matter of conjecture. The forces are there, the support is reduced, and there WILL be accelerated wear on the last couple threads. All of which can be avoided if you vent the pressure as soon as you have unscrewed the cylinder enough to close the internal valve.
If you do not wish to treat your equipment with that degree of extra care, go right ahead.
I said the difference may be minor, but the rest of my statement is not a matter of conjecture. The forces are there, the support is reduced, and there WILL be accelerated wear on the last couple threads. All of which can be avoided if you vent the pressure as soon as you have unscrewed the cylinder enough to close the internal valve.
If you do not wish to treat your equipment with that degree of extra care, go right ahead.
I'll keep it simple for you engineering types.
After about one turn of the cylinder the pressure has completely vented. You cannot use some device to vent a Steyr cylinder; you must unscrew it a little bit. Therefore, after that has occurred you are doing no more than unscrewing the cylinder.
If you fear that is wearing out the gun and cylinder, I offer no help. Perhaps your Steyr is different from mine and many others I've seen.
After about one turn of the cylinder the pressure has completely vented. You cannot use some device to vent a Steyr cylinder; you must unscrew it a little bit. Therefore, after that has occurred you are doing no more than unscrewing the cylinder.
If you fear that is wearing out the gun and cylinder, I offer no help. Perhaps your Steyr is different from mine and many others I've seen.
I hope you have allowed for the fact that the volume of the trapped air is increasing as you unscrew the cylinder therefore reducing in pressure and so reducing the force on the thread...Gwhite wrote:The difference may be minor, but it puts extra wear & tear on the threads. What's worse, as you unscrew the cylinder, the strength of the threaded connection goes down, as the force from the air is supported by fewer & fewer threads. Over time, this will tend to mess up the last couple threads on both the cylinder & the adapter.
I agree with Rover. Just unscrew the thing, the cylinder will be expired before the thread wears out!
- markwarren
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Sun May 22, 2011 4:41 pm
- Location: Crewe, England, UK
Re: not for Steyr
Fred - I have one and it works fine on the Steyr thank you! I can bleed the system before I take the cylinder off.FredB wrote:That works for Morini cylinders, but not for Steyr. Different valve setup.markwarren wrote:I have bought a fill adapter which allows you to bleed the system before you take the cylinder off. This means the cylinders is unscrewed without any pressure on the threads which personally I prefer. They are made by a company called Best Fittings here in the UK.
Good shooting
Mark
- markwarren
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Sun May 22, 2011 4:41 pm
- Location: Crewe, England, UK
Rover wrote:I'll keep it simple for you engineering types.
After about one turn of the cylinder the pressure has completely vented. You cannot use some device to vent a Steyr cylinder; you must unscrew it a little bit. Therefore, after that has occurred you are doing no more than unscrewing the cylinder.
If you fear that is wearing out the gun and cylinder, I offer no help. Perhaps your Steyr is different from mine and many others I've seen.
Yes you can.
I am not an engineering type but I have one and it works. Don't know what else to say really!
Re: not for Steyr
Mark,markwarren wrote:Fred - I have one and it works fine on the Steyr thank you! I can bleed the system before I take the cylinder off.FredB wrote:That works for Morini cylinders, but not for Steyr. Different valve setup.markwarren wrote:I have bought a fill adapter which allows you to bleed the system before you take the cylinder off. This means the cylinders is unscrewed without any pressure on the threads which personally I prefer. They are made by a company called Best Fittings here in the UK.
Good shooting
Mark
It's hard to argue with actual experience. Would you please give us more details - possibly photos - about your fill adapter? I can't imagine an arrangement that would allow what you describe, but I don't claim to have an unlimited imagination.
I'd be curious, too. I have one and it does not work as you describe. We also have such a device on the compressor we use to fill single cylinders at my club. It doesn't work, either.
It WILL work if you back off the cylinder until the valve in it closes, THEN bleed the air.
By that time the air in the system has probably bled out.
As I said, not worth the trouble. I have the two original cylinders (with the pop-out fill indicators and way out of date) and they still work fine.
Hey, Scott....how about kicking in on this one (and get some REAL experience going).
It WILL work if you back off the cylinder until the valve in it closes, THEN bleed the air.
By that time the air in the system has probably bled out.
As I said, not worth the trouble. I have the two original cylinders (with the pop-out fill indicators and way out of date) and they still work fine.
Hey, Scott....how about kicking in on this one (and get some REAL experience going).