thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
I have been around scuba and oxygen tanks for 50 years, the only failure that I have seen, a tank that was in a fire. Scuba and oxygen tanks all have a ten year pressure test requirement. Our AP cylinders are not able to be hydro-statically tested economically, because of the built in manometer. Since we can't test them every ten years, we are suppose to discard them. But, our scuba and oxygen tanks don't fail just because they are to be tested. The fact that we can't test them does not mean they are unsafe, it just means we can't prove they are safe. I would never tell anyone to disregard a safety rule, but ..........
Gort
Gort
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
I have heard of many burst cylinders, there was a defective Walther batch from 2001. But never a word about injuries.
There was another incident in the news where one flew into a dry wall and was stuck there, because the thread was damage.
Manufacturers probably know every serious incident, but they wouldn't report it obviously.
There was another incident in the news where one flew into a dry wall and was stuck there, because the thread was damage.
Manufacturers probably know every serious incident, but they wouldn't report it obviously.
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
I shoot my air PCP at the most 6 times a month. Once a week in a 30 shot local match group. Then if I am lucky an organized 60 shot match. I have 2 cylinders. Maybe fill them once a month. This is in the indoor season. Excessive use??? I stand by my earlier statement!!
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
That's the entire purpose of the testing. To induce a failure under test conditions and not in service.Finelld wrote:I have heard of burst cylinders, but not under normal use. They have either been physically damaged or failed QC checks when they are tested to 150% or more of rated value.
Hence, never fill a damaged cylinder or one whose last test date has expired.
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- Brian Girling
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Yes. A Skanaker/Crossman in a car boot (trunk to you) travelling up the M6 (UK) on a hot day. -- It opened the lid.Rover wrote:OK guys, has any of you heard of a SINGLE burst cylinder?
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Give us a list.hundert wrote:I have heard of many burst cylinders...
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Cylinders in hot boots or other places can cause the internal pressure to exceed tolerances. The manual that came with my Hammerli specifically said not to expose filled cylinders to temperatures above 50c or 122f. While these temperatures are not common in Europe they are common in Phoenix where I grew up. They are also common in cars during most of the year here in San Antonio. The ideal gas law explains this PV=nRT. If you increase the temperature the pressure will increase if all else stays the same.
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
"There was another incident in the news where one flew into a dry wall and was stuck there, because the thread was damage."
I heard about that one, too. Some idiot kid was putting the cylinder off and on the tank with a wrench. We wondered why the tank at our club was getting damaged until we found we also had an idiot in our midst.
What else ya got?
I heard about that one, too. Some idiot kid was putting the cylinder off and on the tank with a wrench. We wondered why the tank at our club was getting damaged until we found we also had an idiot in our midst.
What else ya got?
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Well I witnessed a cylinder launch downrange when the thread stripped while the cylinder was being fitted to the gun.Rover wrote:"There was another incident in the news where one flew into a dry wall and was stuck there, because the thread was damage."
I heard about that one, too. Some idiot kid was putting the cylinder off and on the tank with a wrench. We wondered why the tank at our club was getting damaged until we found we also had an idiot in our midst.
What else ya got?
That was nothing to do with the age limit rule though, more bad design by the manufacturer (now corrected).
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
You won't find one, not anything official especially. Even if one did exist it would be under extremely tight lock and key given the potential financial consequences (removal of an entire product line or replacement of an entire part for all users plus reputation damage).j-team wrote:Give us a list.
Not stating an opinion on whether or not the cylinder rule is good or not, just stating that such a list, especially one spanning multiple countries, would definitely be on the list of things that a company would not want to be public knowledge. Attorneys here would have a lot of "fun" with that type of information.
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
[quote="Finelld"] ..The ideal gas law explains this PV=nRT. If you increase the temperature the pressure will increase if all else stays the same.[/quote]
Dry air will approximate to an ideal gas. CO2 on the other hand changes pressure hyperbolically above a certain temperature and fill level, and a CO2 tank on the back shelf of a car in Phoenix can indeed explode.
By the way the ideal gas equations use degrees kelvin so an increase of 20 degrees C from 10 to 30 is not actually a huge amount as in the formula it goes from 283 to 303deg K..
Dry air will approximate to an ideal gas. CO2 on the other hand changes pressure hyperbolically above a certain temperature and fill level, and a CO2 tank on the back shelf of a car in Phoenix can indeed explode.
By the way the ideal gas equations use degrees kelvin so an increase of 20 degrees C from 10 to 30 is not actually a huge amount as in the formula it goes from 283 to 303deg K..
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
"By the way the ideal gas equations use degrees kelvin so an increase of 20 degrees C from 10 to 30 is not actually a huge amount as in the formula it goes from 283 to 303deg K.."
Yes, both pressures and temperatures are from absolute zero. We can pretty well neglect the pressure difference for zero to atmospheric of 14.7 psi. In other words, no worries in flying, even on the space shuttle's unpressurized cargo bay. Hard to believe that sunny car temperatures will get even a topped off cylinder over its test limit.
Yes, both pressures and temperatures are from absolute zero. We can pretty well neglect the pressure difference for zero to atmospheric of 14.7 psi. In other words, no worries in flying, even on the space shuttle's unpressurized cargo bay. Hard to believe that sunny car temperatures will get even a topped off cylinder over its test limit.
Norm
in beautiful, gun friendly New Jersey
in beautiful, gun friendly New Jersey
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Crossman Skanaker was (is) a CO2 pistol.Brian Girling wrote:Yes. A Skanaker/Crossman in a car boot (trunk to you) travelling up the M6 (UK) on a hot day. -- It opened the lid.Rover wrote:OK guys, has any of you heard of a SINGLE burst cylinder?
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Per the DOT
Retesting not required per the note under table 1 in 49 CFR part 180.205. The note reads, "Any cylinder not exceeding two (2) inches in outside diameter and less than two (2) feet in length is exempt from volumetric expansion testing.
Should give rise to more thought. I think this is for CO2 not sure about air
Retesting not required per the note under table 1 in 49 CFR part 180.205. The note reads, "Any cylinder not exceeding two (2) inches in outside diameter and less than two (2) feet in length is exempt from volumetric expansion testing.
Should give rise to more thought. I think this is for CO2 not sure about air
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Check out this post on the subject: http://www.pyramydair.com/blog/2006/02/ ... nspection/johndeere400 wrote:Per the DOT
Retesting not required per the note under table 1 in 49 CFR part 180.205. The note reads, "Any cylinder not exceeding two (2) inches in outside diameter and less than two (2) feet in length is exempt from volumetric expansion testing.
Should give rise to more thought. I think this is for CO2 not sure about air
He says that
Some manufacturers of 10-meter target guns with removable tanks instruct owners to discard their tanks after 20 years. There is no regulation governing that, it’s simply their recommendation. No gun with a fixed reservoir has any recommendation whatsoever. Because the U.S. DOT does not regulate pressure vessels smaller than two inches in outside diameter, they don’t have to do anything. Other countries have different regulations, so check with your nation’s regulatory agency.
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
my experience with an 'incident' was not a burst, but a 200/220bar cylinder being filled from a 300 (+?) bar supply. The cylinder FIRMLY embedded itself in a concrete black wall. (Otherwise) Normally sane people will use a spacer to screw a 200baqr cylinder onto a 300bar source....
Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
https://forum.waffen-online.de/topic/34 ... tpistolen/j-team wrote:Give us a list.hundert wrote:I have heard of many burst cylinders...
walther recalled those cylinder because they were defective.
Ulrich Eichstädt, who is also a member here in forum, could probably tell you more, he wrote about accidents, but not specific injuries.
- SlartyBartFast
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
I think you're missing a "_NOT_" in the above. Or I'm not understanding how a "spacer" makes fills from a higher pressure tank makes the operation safer.Spencer wrote:my experience with an 'incident' was not a burst, but a 200/220bar cylinder being filled from a 300 (+?) bar supply. The cylinder FIRMLY embedded itself in a concrete black wall. (Otherwise) Normally sane people will use a spacer to screw a 200baqr cylinder onto a 300bar source....
And don't AP and AR cylinders have burst disks installed? F! The primary expected mode of failure due to over pressurisation should NOT be failure of the valve or regulator or the tank bursting. A simple burst disk and the risk of rockets or explosions is eliminated (from over pressurisation, last night while searching I saw stories of exploding paintball tanks from rapid fills).
I don't like trusting my life and limb to people having "common" sense or being "normally" sane. I think it was two deaths from launched CO2 bottles before bottle valves with relief slots on the bottle side threading were made mandatory. Even after the fatal incidents, paintballers were complaining that no one with "common" sense would keep unscrewing a bottle from the valve and would notice the extra length etc.
IMO, clubs should provide and/or only allow regulated fill sources.
For what it's worth, my "common" sense is shouting that much of this discussion complaining about the rules is quite ridiculous without asking someone in the industry for some official legal, technical, and safety comment.
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
A tank with a gauge and an instruction leaflet has served us well for many years.
I wouldnt trust my cylinder to your corporate communal fill system either.
I wouldnt trust my cylinder to your corporate communal fill system either.
Last edited by TenMetrePeter on Wed Feb 22, 2017 11:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
- SlartyBartFast
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Re: thoughts on 10 year cylinder age limit rule
Then you're just trusting the "common" sense of the people filling.TenMetrePeter wrote:A tank with a gauge and an instruction leaflet had served us well for many years.
I wouldnt trust my cylinder to your corporate communal fill system either.
There is the big advantage that the type of shooting discussed here is one of precision and the shooters are liekly to be more evenly keeled and patient than the average paintball player looking to flash fill their tank and run back to spraying paintballs on the field.
Seems to me you've got some serious issues if you're wary of a commercial regulator and gauges.
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