
This is the first time any gun component has failed under pressure in my experience, and I just thought I'd share it. Tomorrow I will cap off the magazine properly with copper and do a write-up for the MMG if it still works.
It does?! Looks pretty hardcore to me, what with the protruding shards of PVC and whatnotTHUNDERLORD wrote:Pic looks like a m@sturb#t!on toy... size extra small.
It looks like the magazine launched into the loading cap. Maybe a bumper between a tube of projectiles and the target is in order.skyjive wrote:So I just finished the soldering and threading and my shiny new copper marble MG was complete. The only thing lacking was a copper fitting to cap off the magazine, which pressurizes when the gun fires. Since it was 11 PM and all hardware stores (even Home Depot!) were closed, I screwed on the only thing at hand, a pvc endcap with a schraeder glued in the middle, hooked up my CO2 tank, and tested the gun. The first 3 shots were an unqualified success. The on the fourth shot, instead of a marble hitting the backstop downrange, there was a crack and fragments of pvc went flying past my head, one hitting me in the face, another in the shoulder (no harm done, thankfully). Here is what rapid pulses of 120 psi CO2 does to pvc weakened with a hole drilled for a schraeder:
This is the first time any gun component has failed under pressure in my experience, and I just thought I'd share it. Tomorrow I will cap off the magazine properly with copper and do a write-up for the MMG if it still works.
Agreed, happened to me with Tee magazines - as the mag empties, it effectively becomes a vertical barrelTechnician1002 wrote:This is most likely a projectile damage, not a pressure damage.