Steyr LP1 co2 ?
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Steyr LP1 co2 ?
Any good thoughts on how you know when your co2 is low?Without a guage?
a pressure gauge on a CO2 pistol would be a bit like training wheels on a Harley - by the time the gauge registered a meaningful drop in pressure it is getting too late: though the release on the old Hammerlis worked fairly well.
These pistols work on the vapour pressure from liquid CO2 - a pressure gauge would only show when the liquid is exhausted, no indication of the liquid remaining
S
These pistols work on the vapour pressure from liquid CO2 - a pressure gauge would only show when the liquid is exhausted, no indication of the liquid remaining
S
What sort of internal system is used to stop the liquid CO2 sloshing about
No system IS required... a full cylinder would contain ideally, 53 grams of Liquid CO2 , when you are holding the gun steady , no sloshing... No sloshing detectable even when you are waving the gun around !!
The beauty of CO2 over compressed air.. is that the pressure inside the CO2 cyliinder remains exactly the same ( according to the laws of physics) as long as there is some liquid CO2 remaining... pressure only starts to drop when all liquid has been consumed ( to replenish escaped gaseous CO2 when firing ) .... So you are certain there is exactly the same pressure behind every pellet .
[/quote]Elmas wrote: No system IS required... a full cylinder would contain ideally, 53 grams of Liquid CO2 , when you are holding the gun steady , no sloshing... No sloshing detectable even when you are waving the gun around !!
If there were no baffling etc, you would be able to feel the liquid moving about.
My guess is it either has a series of solid internal baffles or maybe some sort of mesh that slows the flow of any fluids around.
Anyone know for sure?