My question is: In you opinion, what category does this valve fall in and why?


I cut ALL O-ring seats with a .125 ball end mill.mobile chernobyl wrote:Barrel sealing, very similar to a regular QEV actually. In the spudgun world it would be "barrel sealing" because it seals off the barrel, or outlet, and not the chamber, or pressure vessel. Either way the pilot is the same.
Do you make your o-ring grooves with a radius like pictured, or do you just have them with a squarish profile? Either way cool drawing, looks like SolidWorks? I love that program lol.
Oh yea how do you get the middle (where the inlet comes in, and the conical section of the piston rests) section of the large body with a larger ID? I'd assume you just use a boring bar? That's always a tricky machining maneuver... But I guess since it's not used as a sealing face the surface doesn't need to be perfect.
Yes...it was intentional.POLAND_SPUD Posted:
why there is so much pilot volume ? was it intentional ? if yes then what purpose it serves ?
Spot,spot wrote:I think there's not much pilot volume at all, and he uses the spring loaded ballvalve to dump it as fast as possible. If I recall correctly, his valve didn't actuate very fast when he was using a smaller pilot valve. He needs that much pilot volume for it to not constrict flow.
This is a common misconception. It ignores the fact that;spot wrote:I think there's not much pilot volume at all, and he uses the spring loaded ballvalve to dump it as fast as possible. If I recall correctly, his valve didn't actuate very fast when he was using a smaller pilot valve. He needs that much pilot volume for it to not constrict flow.
Exactly....and pop open with explosive force!Tech.....Even the mass of the air in the barrel and the flow resistance is enough to make them pop open.