dschaller wrote:This decision by USA Shooting will cost those least able to afford it multiple thousands of dollars, and does nothing to guarantee safety. All for a potential issue that as far as I know (failure of a tank over ten years old without other contributing factors), has never happened. The only failures I have been able to document happened to tanks that were significantly less than 10 years old. Now we have some bureaucrats declaring that at 10 years, an air tank is no longer safe, even if it sat unused the entire time, while a tank filled multiple times a day is perfectly fine for ten years. Total nonsense!
What other method do you propose to find out if an old cylinder is safe, i.e. to find out how many times it was filled ?
dschaller wrote:Other posters have said " replacing a tank is cheap insurance". That may be true for a gun purchased one or two years ago (of course you don't need to replace the tank then, do you?) How many of airguns available today will have new tanks available 10 years from now?
Steyr, FWB, Pardini, Morini have the same cylinders (or cylinder thread) since many years, more than 10 years for Steyr, FWB and Morini. All the big existing brands, even Walther that changed many times their cylinders, are able to provide a solution for their old pistols.
The prices of new cylinders are between 100 and 150€ (not "multiple thousands of dollars") so between 10 and 15€ per year.
dschaller wrote:And by the way, buying a second tank with your gun is now really stupid - it will be "used up" before you even get around to using it. So now when you buy a "new" tank, I guess we should expect the dealer will give you a discount off the list price for every day your tank was used up before you get it.....
They do. I bought Anschutz cylinders new but with an older manufacturing date a couple of years ago at a discount price (and received with it a certificate from Anschutz that it was new, never used at the purchase date) and saw several new cylinders with an older manufacturing date on Egun sold at a discount price (for instance FWB AP cylinders from 2011 at 90€ when it cost new between 125 and 135€).
dschaller wrote:How does an individual (or even worse a school with many older guns like Hammerli pistols) get new replacement tanks today? Oh, too bad, they have to throw out perfectly serviceable guns because newly dated tanks are not available - even if they exist, New Old Stock tanks are useless! Just what this country needs - even fewer schools with precision shooting programs.
The old Hammerli from the "pre-Walther"time are the only problem and the problem isn't a technical problem, it is because the company doesn't exist anymore (bankruptcy, Umarex/Walther took over only the brand name and some of the latest products). All old Hammerli guns have the same spare parts problem, not only airguns, and if your airgun fails for any reason other than the cylinder you also cannot get spare parts.
dschaller wrote:We should also stop comparing air gun tanks to scuba tanks, since the energy stored in a scuba tank is over 100 times more than an air gun tank. The danger is simply not comparable. These people apparently think air tanks explode like grenades when they fail. I challenge anyone to provide documentation that this has ever happened.
Even if they are smaller, airgun cylinder are dangerous. There are pictures of exploded Anschutz cylinders (no due to age but the result is the same). Would you like this to happen to you or to a shooter shooting besides you ?