Replacement Cylinder for FWB
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- Posts: 81
- Joined: Fri Aug 03, 2007 5:17 pm
- Location: Colorado
Replacement Cylinder for FWB
Team,
My son just recently started shooting AP and really likes it.
But, the pistol we use is a FWB Model 2 Short and the cylinders are dated 1983! As a result, he will be unable to use these cylinders due to their age.
Both Pilkingtons and Cxxxxxxx's Choice responded to my email query in the negative for replacement cylinders, hence my post here.
I'm still waiting on a response from FWB in Germany.
Does anyone know of a source here in the USA?
Thank you,
Chris
I imagine one could manufacture one for themselves if one had the proper tooling and materials and stamp the manufacturing date on it. By my reading, the ISSF rules do not specify the airgun manufacturer must be the pressure vessel manufacturer, so this is may be a viable option--but I'd prefer the easier route of buying one .
My son just recently started shooting AP and really likes it.
But, the pistol we use is a FWB Model 2 Short and the cylinders are dated 1983! As a result, he will be unable to use these cylinders due to their age.
Both Pilkingtons and Cxxxxxxx's Choice responded to my email query in the negative for replacement cylinders, hence my post here.
I'm still waiting on a response from FWB in Germany.
Does anyone know of a source here in the USA?
Thank you,
Chris
I imagine one could manufacture one for themselves if one had the proper tooling and materials and stamp the manufacturing date on it. By my reading, the ISSF rules do not specify the airgun manufacturer must be the pressure vessel manufacturer, so this is may be a viable option--but I'd prefer the easier route of buying one .
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- Posts: 81
- Joined: Fri Aug 03, 2007 5:17 pm
- Location: Colorado
I agree, and
Rover,
While I agree with you, the club my son shoots at will start enforcing this rule next month.
Right now, as you indicated, he's not a World Class Shooter yet, so it makes more economical sense to spend the money to keep him shooting this gun rather than invest in a new CA pistol with ISSF valid pressure vessels.
:-)
Respectfully,
Chris
While I agree with you, the club my son shoots at will start enforcing this rule next month.
Right now, as you indicated, he's not a World Class Shooter yet, so it makes more economical sense to spend the money to keep him shooting this gun rather than invest in a new CA pistol with ISSF valid pressure vessels.
:-)
Respectfully,
Chris
Chris;
What I think Rover is trying to say is that it's unlikely you'll run into strict equipment control at a local match. Should your son advance to the point where he's shooting matches that do have strict equipment control, then you should look at getting a new cylinder or upgrade the pistol.
If you really need a new cylinder, a german supplier has them: http://www.schiesssport-buinger.de/shoo ... rd-Co2-53g
I've ordered from them, it's easy to do. They ship small parts to the US, and you can pay with paypal. It looks like they only have the full sized cylinders, not the short ones.
Good luck,
-John
What I think Rover is trying to say is that it's unlikely you'll run into strict equipment control at a local match. Should your son advance to the point where he's shooting matches that do have strict equipment control, then you should look at getting a new cylinder or upgrade the pistol.
If you really need a new cylinder, a german supplier has them: http://www.schiesssport-buinger.de/shoo ... rd-Co2-53g
I've ordered from them, it's easy to do. They ship small parts to the US, and you can pay with paypal. It looks like they only have the full sized cylinders, not the short ones.
Good luck,
-John
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- Posts: 81
- Joined: Fri Aug 03, 2007 5:17 pm
- Location: Colorado
Replacement Cylinder for FWB
Rover,
You must be psychic <<grin>>. It was over a year wait to get into the club and the Jr shooting program--my son is very excited to go there. The facilities, people and atmosphere are awesome.
Silly rule or not, I'm not too concerned other than just getting the pistol compliant as it's the one my son prefers (he's plinked with it for years). Precision shooting is new to him and he likes it. Anything that keeps a teenager occupied is great news for me!
As an engineer, scuba diver, and some exposure to the law, I understand both sides of the issue regarding the ISSF rule--as has been discussed previously in TargetTalk. I do my own visuals/maintenance and am comfortable with my FWB cylinders despite their 30+ years age. Shucks, my my steel scuba tanks are almost that old too, and my CO2 tank is pushing 40 years LOL (all properly hydro'd).
Thank you for your feedback and perspective.
John,
Thanks for the feedback and link. I've contacted them and will update all with what I find out.
Does anyone have the dimensions of a normal length cylinder which hold 53 grams of CO2? I'm beginning to wonder how it would look under a FWB Mod 2 short pistol...
Respectfully
Chris
You must be psychic <<grin>>. It was over a year wait to get into the club and the Jr shooting program--my son is very excited to go there. The facilities, people and atmosphere are awesome.
Silly rule or not, I'm not too concerned other than just getting the pistol compliant as it's the one my son prefers (he's plinked with it for years). Precision shooting is new to him and he likes it. Anything that keeps a teenager occupied is great news for me!
As an engineer, scuba diver, and some exposure to the law, I understand both sides of the issue regarding the ISSF rule--as has been discussed previously in TargetTalk. I do my own visuals/maintenance and am comfortable with my FWB cylinders despite their 30+ years age. Shucks, my my steel scuba tanks are almost that old too, and my CO2 tank is pushing 40 years LOL (all properly hydro'd).
Thank you for your feedback and perspective.
John,
Thanks for the feedback and link. I've contacted them and will update all with what I find out.
Does anyone have the dimensions of a normal length cylinder which hold 53 grams of CO2? I'm beginning to wonder how it would look under a FWB Mod 2 short pistol...
Respectfully
Chris
Since the club doesn't start this rule until next month, it's not too late to tell the Board of Directors what you think. Why would they bring an obscure and ill-advised rule from a European shooting organization into their American club?
If you do a search here, you'll find plenty of ammunition for your point of view. I can't imagine what putz put this notion in their heads.
If you do a search here, you'll find plenty of ammunition for your point of view. I can't imagine what putz put this notion in their heads.
Last edited by Rover on Sat Nov 23, 2013 4:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Replacement Cylinder for FWB
If I remember correctly the long cylinder will hit the underside of the front sight body on the short model 2. But, don't take my word for it, it's been 25 years since I had one!Chris__Colorado wrote:Does anyone have the dimensions of a normal length cylinder which hold 53 grams of CO2? I'm beginning to wonder how it would look under a FWB Mod 2 short pistol...
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- Posts: 81
- Joined: Fri Aug 03, 2007 5:17 pm
- Location: Colorado
Thank you.
Thank you for the dimensions.
It looks like the 53 gram cylinders are about 2cm longer than the 41 gram cylinder.
Still waiting on some replies from some more vendors, but so far no one has a currently rated 41gram short (kurtz) cylinder.
VR
Chris
It looks like the 53 gram cylinders are about 2cm longer than the 41 gram cylinder.
Still waiting on some replies from some more vendors, but so far no one has a currently rated 41gram short (kurtz) cylinder.
VR
Chris