Airsoft Canada
http://triggerairsoft.com/shop/

Go Back   Airsoft Canada > Discussion > Doctor's Corner
Home Forums Register Gallery FAQ Calendar
Retailers Community News/Info International Retailers IRC Today's Posts

How loose should the piston head be?

:

Doctor's Corner

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:27   #1
digital_blue
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: In the sticks
How loose should the piston head be?

I just scratch built an MP5 from various parts and I slapped in the mag expecting at least 250-300 FPS from the stock well gearbox. What I got was a less than impressive 170 or so. I opened up the gearbox and it appears that the piston head was very loose in the cylinder and the O-ring wasn't sealing against the sides. Should the piston head be this loose?
digital_blue is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:31   #2
Darklen
Administrator
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Red Deer, AB
There should be no movement between the piston head and the piston. Any movement could lead to failure of the connection and you'd end up damaging or even destroying the piston, piston head, cylinder and/or cylinder head. Make sure the piston head is tight to the piston.
__________________
ASC Age Verifier for Red Deer & Area Alberta
Darklen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:35   #3
Gigaknight
 
Gigaknight's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Montreal, Qc
Mechbox.com suggests using loctite to ensure that the piston head won't move unless you try removing it manually. What do you think of that?
__________________
G&P M4 Sopmod
G&P Mk18 Mod 0
KSC USP Tactical (System 7)


T.A.C.O.
Tactical Airsoft Combat Operatives
Gigaknight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:39   #4
Syn
 
Syn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Toronto
To add- check how you screwed in the tiny bolt to the piston head, cross threading it, it wont screw all the way in to tighten the piston head.

For the o ring, I like to strech it out by hand and lube it making sure I get no lube in to the piston head airholes. Then put your thumb on cylinder head nozzle hole and push the piston head quickly forwards into the cylinder. If the piston+piston head immediately creates air pressure resistance, youv'e got a good seal. Then test the nozzle when it is at its farthest forward like it would be by the tappet plate and test for compression again.
__________________

Syn is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:41   #5
Darklen
Administrator
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Red Deer, AB
Locktite will cause polycarbonite plastic to crack and fail in a very short period. If the piston head has a metal female thread embedded in it or is made of metal itself, it should be ok so long as you put just a dab on the threads, soak up the excess with a tissue, then thread it in.

Avoid using too much and avoid allowing it to contact and plastic parts. If you wipe it off right away you'll be fine, but if you leave it on, you could have the plastic component fail on you in time. Also, I'd recommend using Locktite 222. It's low strength, milky purple in color. It will hold the part easily, but will still allow you to remove it whenyou want. If that's not strong enough, use Locktite 242, it's a milky blue color, is stronger than 222 but will still allow you to remove the part, though it will be hard to get out. If you never want the part to come out again, ever, use Locktite 271. It's clear red and permenent.
__________________
ASC Age Verifier for Red Deer & Area Alberta
Darklen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:46   #6
Gigaknight
 
Gigaknight's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Montreal, Qc
Thanks Darklen, that could very well have saved me a lot of future difficulties, heh heh. Though aside from loctite, is there anything else that can be used on polycarb piston heads?
__________________
G&P M4 Sopmod
G&P Mk18 Mod 0
KSC USP Tactical (System 7)


T.A.C.O.
Tactical Airsoft Combat Operatives
Gigaknight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:54   #7
Darklen
Administrator
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Red Deer, AB
I used to use silicone chaulking when installing scope mounts on high powered rifles (real steel). It seem to absorb the shock well and the screws didn't back out. Never tried it with a piston head (I use locktite all the time at work, so I have everything I need in my home shop), but I can't see it hurting. Just wait a full 24 hours for it to cure properly and make sure there's no oils, silicone or otherwise on the curing surfaces. Hell, you could even try a wrap of teflon tape (plumbers tape), it'd probably work fine.
__________________
ASC Age Verifier for Red Deer & Area Alberta
Darklen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 14:59   #8
Gigaknight
 
Gigaknight's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Montreal, Qc
Quote:
Originally Posted by Darklen View Post
I used to use silicone chaulking when installing scope mounts on high powered rifles (real steel). It seem to absorb the shock well and the screws didn't back out. Never tried it with a piston head (I use locktite all the time at work, so I have everything I need in my home shop), but I can't see it hurting. Just wait a full 24 hours for it to cure properly and make sure there's no oils, silicone or otherwise on the curing surfaces. Hell, you could even try a wrap of teflon tape (plumbers tape), it'd probably work fine.
Well, if you say Loctite works, then Loctite it is! That should help my piston assembly out a bit.
__________________
G&P M4 Sopmod
G&P Mk18 Mod 0
KSC USP Tactical (System 7)


T.A.C.O.
Tactical Airsoft Combat Operatives
Gigaknight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 15:36   #9
Crunchmeister
 
Crunchmeister's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: In your bedroom going though your underwear drawer
Remove the o-ring from the head and stretch it. It should be loose around the piston head, not tight. That will give you amuch better air seal.
__________________
Crunchmeister is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 16:26   #10
Darklen
Administrator
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Red Deer, AB
Dummy me, now that I've reread the original post, does the piston head even have vent holes? I know TM does not and I always drill them in whenever I open a TM box. There is usually 4 knockout pin marks on the head face I use as a guide for the first four holes, then I measure and drill another four holes in between these for eight holes spaced equally running just inside the outer rim of the piston head.

SYN outlined the proper procedure for testing compression, though since this box is a Well, I'd probably just replace the oring with a quality part, slightly larger, that doesn't have a seam around it. If you don't have that option, try getting an oring lube that will expand the orings, like DOW 55. This can help the sealing factor quite a bit, but it could also destroy the oring as I have no idea what orings Well use.

Without doing the compression test, like SYN outlined, the piston head will appear quite loose in the cylinder. It had to be loose on the return or pulling stroke as the motor is already fighting the spring and you want as much air in the cylinder as possible before it hits the compression stage.
__________________
ASC Age Verifier for Red Deer & Area Alberta

Last edited by Darklen; June 7th, 2008 at 16:28..
Darklen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2008, 17:18   #11
CDN_Stalker
Official ASC Bladesmith
 
CDN_Stalker's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Ottawa, Ont.
Send a message via MSN to CDN_Stalker
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gigaknight View Post
Thanks Darklen, that could very well have saved me a lot of future difficulties, heh heh. Though aside from loctite, is there anything else that can be used on polycarb piston heads?
Nail polish. Seriously.
CDN_Stalker is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 8th, 2008, 03:40   #12
digital_blue
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: In the sticks
Quote:
Originally Posted by Darklen View Post
Dummy me, now that I've reread the original post, does the piston head even have vent holes? I know TM does not and I always drill them in whenever I open a TM box. There is usually 4 knockout pin marks on the head face I use as a guide for the first four holes, then I measure and drill another four holes in between these for eight holes spaced equally running just inside the outer rim of the piston head.

SYN outlined the proper procedure for testing compression, though since this box is a Well, I'd probably just replace the oring with a quality part, slightly larger, that doesn't have a seam around it. If you don't have that option, try getting an oring lube that will expand the orings, like DOW 55. This can help the sealing factor quite a bit, but it could also destroy the oring as I have no idea what orings Well use.

Without doing the compression test, like SYN outlined, the piston head will appear quite loose in the cylinder. It had to be loose on the return or pulling stroke as the motor is already fighting the spring and you want as much air in the cylinder as possible before it hits the compression stage.
The piston head is not vented. I actually took off the O-ring and put it down the cylinder and there seems to be a lot of play. Should there be this much spacing between the O-ring and the cylinder?
digital_blue is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 8th, 2008, 04:46   #13
grimreefer
 
grimreefer's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Victoria, BC
What is the idea behind vented piston heads? Or not the idea...the mechanism, rather? I don't mean to try and steal the thread, but feel it's relevant.
__________________
grimreefer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 8th, 2008, 09:29   #14
Syn
 
Syn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Toronto
Quote:
Originally Posted by grimreefer View Post
What is the idea behind vented piston heads? Or not the idea...the mechanism, rather? I don't mean to try and steal the thread, but feel it's relevant.
Having the symetical holes eg 4 or 8 in you piston head causes air to rush into those holes (when the piston accelerates forward with high velocity by the spring). THe Air goes into the holes and this air creates pressure against the inside surface of the "loose" oring. As the air pressure builds up the orring is stretched out(pushed out from all sides) and this makes the oring outer surface contact the inner surface of the cylinder resulting in a seal and good compression.

digital_blue is it possible to drill symetrical holes in your piston head. I think this would help you greatly. Also how were your parts matched up? Did they come in a kit or are you mixing and matching?
As far as the loosness, My piston head oring has much play, but it is the oring streched out which causes the gool seal.

If you are not getting good compression:
1) get a vented piston head or drill your own holes (NOTE the holes do NOT go straight through the piston head to the back side of the piston head, the holes are drilled part way through to the Oring groove in the piston head. Drilled hole straight through to the back side caused very bad seal.)

2) Goto home depot with your old washer, piston head and lubes cylinder and go to plumbing dept and try on a bigger washer. Find a rubber oring that fits the piston oring groove and moves freely but has a greater outer diamter than your old oring. You can also use thicker 100% silicone paste from the plumbing dept to help fill the gap especially if the cylinder lube you are currently using is very thin.

But the Piston head holes help SOOOOOOOOOO much to get good compression.
__________________


Last edited by Syn; June 8th, 2008 at 09:41..
Syn is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 8th, 2008, 11:45   #15
Skruface
 
Skruface's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Quote:
Originally Posted by digital_blue View Post
I just scratch built an MP5 from various parts
Just to throw this out there....since you built a gun from a pile of parts (of dubious origin?) there's always the possibility you have a bore-up cylinder....in which case, no amount of fiddling with the piston head will ever make it fit properly.
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by TokyoSeven View Post
That was a very bad move on your behalf. Sort of like cutting off your foot for money, but not getting the money first and then letting the person with the money run away.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MadMorbius View Post
Liberals rely on emotion. Conservatives rely on evidence, and the Socialists rely on everyone else.
Skruface is offline   Reply With Quote
ReplyTop


Go Back   Airsoft Canada > Discussion > Doctor's Corner

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


Airsoft Canada
http://triggerairsoft.com/shop/

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 16:24.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.