Filling of PCP tank
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, David Levene, Spencer, Richard H
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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Tue Nov 30, 2010 12:24 pm
Filling of PCP tank
Hi everyone,
I recently purchased a FWB 700 and a hand pump. In the manual it states that hand pumps are not recommended with no further reasoning as to why. Can anyone tell me why.
Thanks,
Bob
I recently purchased a FWB 700 and a hand pump. In the manual it states that hand pumps are not recommended with no further reasoning as to why. Can anyone tell me why.
Thanks,
Bob
You can only do about 20 strokes before you have to stop to let it cool down. It took about 200 strokes to fill the my cylinders so you can get plenty of exercise. If you don't stop you can risk generating heat and then moisture. If you generate to much heat you can effect the seals and at the same time condensate. I had a hand pump before they came out with ones you can drain and the moisture had rusted the metal inside to the point it seized up. You can imagine if it's generating that kind moisture what your pump will putting into your rifle cylinder.Richard H wrote:The only down side of a pump is possible condensation. I would figure with rifle tanks its more of a problem due to the size. If pumping, fill it slow don't let it get too hot and use what ever condensate management system you have.
Maybe the new ones that have a filter and drain can do better, but even the electric compressors have several sets of filters to keep the moisture out of the air.
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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Tue Nov 30, 2010 12:24 pm
Filling of PCP tank
So it's all about moisture. Got it.
My pump has a moisture filter after the particle filter in the handle, but it seems as though they should have the moisture filter at the end of the hose before it goes into the guns air reservoir.
Thanks,
Bob
My pump has a moisture filter after the particle filter in the handle, but it seems as though they should have the moisture filter at the end of the hose before it goes into the guns air reservoir.
Thanks,
Bob
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- Posts: 256
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- Location: New Zealand
A gunsmith I once met from Australia said he could tell almost instantly when servicing AP's & AR's which had been filled from tanks and which from high-pressure hand pumps.
Air from dive shops and BA filling stations goes through a series of high quality moisture traps to reduce humidity to a bare minimum (something which is very necessary with steel SCUBA and BA tanks). The moisture traps installed in various hand-pumps don't come close to professional fill-stations in terms of their ability to remove moisture from the air.
The ambient relative humidity can also have a big impact on the level of risk the use of a hand pump imposes on your AP / AR (i.e. using a hand pump in Arizona in winter is far less risky than using one in Florida in summer).
Air from dive shops and BA filling stations goes through a series of high quality moisture traps to reduce humidity to a bare minimum (something which is very necessary with steel SCUBA and BA tanks). The moisture traps installed in various hand-pumps don't come close to professional fill-stations in terms of their ability to remove moisture from the air.
The ambient relative humidity can also have a big impact on the level of risk the use of a hand pump imposes on your AP / AR (i.e. using a hand pump in Arizona in winter is far less risky than using one in Florida in summer).
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- Location: Costa Rica, Central America
I live in Puerto Limón, Costa Rica (which is at sea level.)Fortitudo Dei wrote:A gunsmith I once met from Australia said he could tell almost instantly when servicing AP's & AR's which had been filled from tanks and which from high-pressure hand pumps.
Air from dive shops and BA filling stations goes through a series of high quality moisture traps to reduce humidity to a bare minimum (something which is very necessary with steel SCUBA and BA tanks). The moisture traps installed in various hand-pumps don't come close to professional fill-stations in terms of their ability to remove moisture from the air.
The ambient relative humidity can also have a big impact on the level of risk the use of a hand pump imposes on your AP / AR (i.e. using a hand pump in Arizona in winter is far less risky than using one in Florida in summer).
If I use a dehumidifier in a small room along with my FX pump, will this combination considerably reduce the moisture being pumped into my PCP's?
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- Posts: 949
- Joined: Wed Oct 14, 2009 12:44 pm
- Location: Costa Rica, Central America
Scuba diving is not common in the area where i live in, and people usually go to the beach to take a dip or swim... So, i guess i'll continue using the dehumidifier and add a filter/dessicant to the FX pump.Richard H wrote:It would conceivably reduce it to what ever you reduce the humidity level to in the room, still no where near dry as that provided in a dive shop. I would think living on the coast in Costa Rica dive shops would be plentiful.
There are two types of tanks, scuba, and SCBA. SCBA is the airpac firemen use. These get filled to a nominal 4500psi as compared to 3000psi for the scuba tank. So SCBA equipment and fill level is preferable. Anyway, I have a 88 cu ft scba, and I get 35 fills for 300 shots, so a fill is a ton of shooting. I get mine filled at Penn State, and many fire companies fill tanks for a small donation. Give the cost of 22 rimfire compared to pellets, tanks and filling is cheap. Here is a link to fill stations/
http://www.network54.com/Forum/79537/me ... ookmark+it
http://www.network54.com/Forum/79537/me ... ookmark+it