In this regard, I feel that any explosion danger is greater with CO2 than compressed air. And I have direct personal experience to quantify both.Jon Math wrote:Thanks, that is good to know. I always wondered if it would just leak or blow off the end of the cylinder.
With compressed air, a seal failure means a blow-by leak of air of a known pressure to zero pressure... it just leaks down. Lots of hissing but no drama. I've had this happen twice with CZ200 cylinders... the gauge incident noted above, and a cylinder seal failure during a Field Target match. Again, hissing but no explosion.
In contrast, with CO2, the pressure rises dramatically (explosively) as 800psi liquid (supergas) is exposed to ambient air and expands. That's how CO2 works when controlled -- firing a shot -- but uncontrolled when there is to seal failure.
I acquired a rare, .20cal Sharp UDII CO2 rifle several years ago as a collector piece. Love the rifle, still have it and shoot it occasionally. However, it was already many years old when I bought it, and I doubted the integrity of the seals. So... the first time I filled it with CO2, I removed the stock and wrapped the action in a bath towel, just in case. Sure enough, an hour later, as the liquid CO2 rose to room temperature, one of the tube seals gave way comprehensively.
KABOOM! The valve flew out the back of the rifle, taking the hammer and spring with it. Thankfully, all was contained within the towel. No metal parts were destroyed, other than I found only about half the o-ring, broken into a dozen bits. The o-ring was very old, dry, hard and brittle, and had several cracks. The boom was quite loud.
Just to emphasize... this happened because the o-ring was beyond old with many defects, releasing the CO2 at a high (explosive) rate. A worn o-ring that is otherwise in good shape will not explode if contained within its groove... it will just leak loudly until the CO2 is gone.
Recognizing that anything can happen, this has been my experience with CO2 and compressed air, to date. IMO the sky does not fall...