The issue can be recreated every time by closing slightly for dry fire, thenot closing the cocking lever, then it shoots a lower velocity of air, and causes a squib.
Any body know why?
Steyr LP10e cocking lever discharges air
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Re: Steyr LP10e cocking lever discharges air
Are you asking out of curiosity about what causes this, or if this is normal?Chuckiep wrote:The issue can be recreated every time by closing slightly for dry fire, thenot closing the cocking lever, then it shoots a lower velocity of air, and causes a squib.
Any body know why?
It's normal. Does that with every LP10 I've seen and with my EVO-10. After dry-firing and then closing fully the cocking lever, there's a pfffft noise with a wee bit of air being discharged. No idea why this is, but it is indeed normal.
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Re: Steyr LP10e cocking lever discharges air
I had that too on 10e a couple of times
Re: Steyr LP10e cocking lever discharges air
Thanks for the reply!
Here was the Solve:
The velocity screward was turned up by 2.5 turns. The shooter thought he needed more velocity, I think because he was using a poorly calibrated chronograph.
Anyways, if that velocity screw is turned up that much and dry fired, the firing pin, or what ever is released by the sear, gets released further whenhance the lever goes to full cock. The pressure stored in the pin is enough to fire enough air to squib a round.
Here was the Solve:
The velocity screward was turned up by 2.5 turns. The shooter thought he needed more velocity, I think because he was using a poorly calibrated chronograph.
Anyways, if that velocity screw is turned up that much and dry fired, the firing pin, or what ever is released by the sear, gets released further whenhance the lever goes to full cock. The pressure stored in the pin is enough to fire enough air to squib a round.