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Tying to Locate Components for Making Syphon CO2 Tanks

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    Tying to Locate Components for Making Syphon CO2 Tanks

    Hello Experts

    We still use CO2 here and I have to build siphon tanks. What are the fittings that we are supposed to use? Where is best place to get the fittings and hose in bulk?

    Best,

    Smiley

    #2
    For the tank itself it's just an anti siphon tube and you install it upside down.

    The rest depends on what exactly you are trying to set up

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      #3
      The original trick was 1/8" compression fittings.

      You screw one into the base of the pin valve, in place of the hollow setscrew that holds the spring in. Attach to that a length of 1/8" microline of appropriate length. At the other end, attach the a second compression fitting, loose, so it's only attached to the tubing. Put a sleeve of heat-shrink over it to help pad/dampen. Install the pin valve as usual.

      The tube reaches to the bottom of the tank, and the weight on the loose end helps keep it down in the liquid, no matter which way the tank is turned.

      Doc.
      Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
      The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
      Paintball in the Movies!

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        #4
        You'll also need to harvest older co2 valves from older tanks, that have no safety groove in the threads......
        '96 RF Mini Cocker, '95 RF Autococker, 68-Automag Classic, Banzai Splash Minimag, Gen-E Matrix, Shoebox Shocker 4x4, Montneel Z-1, Tippmann Pro-Carbine, Tippmann Mini-Lite, Tippmann Model-98, Tippmann 68-Special, Spyder .50 cal Opus/Opus-A , Tippmann .50 Cal Cronus , Gog Enmey .50 cal , Tippmann Vert ASA 68-Carbine, Bob Long Millennium, ICD Grey Green Marble Splash Alleycat Deluxe (runs liquid co2) , Halfblock 2K4 Prostock Autococker , 2K RF Sniper II

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        • OpusX

          OpusX

          commented
          Editing a comment
          Ahhh I knew there was a reason I was keeping all my old Catalina bottles.

        #5
        Originally posted by Meleager7 View Post
        You'll also need to harvest older co2 valves from older tanks, that have no safety groove in the threads......
        Why? I installed a AS in a valve that had the groove. It's the same idea just up instead of down

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          #6
          Originally posted by Meleager7 View Post
          You'll also need to harvest older co2 valves from older tanks, that have no safety groove in the threads......
          -The "safety groove", at least as far as the siphon goes, is irrelevant. The groove is on the outside threads, and only comes into play if/when the valve is being unscrewed from the tank while it's still charged. Apart from that, it has nothing to do, for, against, about or with the siphon.

          Doc.
          Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
          The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
          Paintball in the Movies!

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            #7
            Originally posted by DocsMachine View Post

            -The "safety groove", at least as far as the siphon goes, is irrelevant. The groove is on the outside threads, and only comes into play if/when the valve is being unscrewed from the tank while it's still charged. Apart from that, it has nothing to do, for, against, about or with the siphon.

            Doc.
            Hi Doc,

            I thought this design shown here was the reason newer valves could not be used for Siphon tank applications? That groove and extra input hole would allow gaseous co2 to bypass the siphon tube was my understanding.



            4000+ paintball guns, markers and other gear from Tippmann, Dye, Kingman and more.
            '96 RF Mini Cocker, '95 RF Autococker, 68-Automag Classic, Banzai Splash Minimag, Gen-E Matrix, Shoebox Shocker 4x4, Montneel Z-1, Tippmann Pro-Carbine, Tippmann Mini-Lite, Tippmann Model-98, Tippmann 68-Special, Spyder .50 cal Opus/Opus-A , Tippmann .50 Cal Cronus , Gog Enmey .50 cal , Tippmann Vert ASA 68-Carbine, Bob Long Millennium, ICD Grey Green Marble Splash Alleycat Deluxe (runs liquid co2) , Halfblock 2K4 Prostock Autococker , 2K RF Sniper II

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            • Chappy

              Chappy

              commented
              Editing a comment
              Yup these need to be avoided. No matter what you put below that valve it’ll just suck gas through the side

            #8
            Smiley, send me your zip code, I have some of the supplies. I'll get you a picture of what I have and I can send it to you for what ever shipping costs me.
            Originally posted by MAr "... Nish deleted it..."
            Originally posted by Painthappy "...I like what nish did..."
            Originally posted by Axel "coffee-fueled, beer-cooled."
            Originally posted by Carp "Nish's two brain cells"
            Master Jar-Jar

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              #9
              If the safety groove has a hole the goes though the stem then it will bypass the siphon and just suck gass through the groove. If it does not have the hole all the way through the groove then it will work.

              Another issue with some more modern tanks is they are not all 1/8” at the plug.

              Comment


              • Meleager7

                Meleager7

                commented
                Editing a comment
                Ok cool, I didn’t know the grooved valves come in two versions, one still siphon tank friendly, and the other not. Good to know!

              • Chappy

                Chappy

                commented
                Editing a comment
                Unfortunately the one you posted above is the most common and does not work. I typically find the old ones and use those. I have seen grooved valves without the holes but they are rare in my experience. Much more common to see the hole without the groove but they stopped doing that since thread raked can block it.

              #10
              Originally posted by Meleager7 View Post
              I thought this design shown here was the reason newer valves could not be used for Siphon tank applications? That groove and extra input hole would allow gaseous co2 to bypass the siphon tube was my understanding.
              -Odd, I'd never seen that particular style. All the ones I ever dealt with with a groove, said groove was just on the outer threads, about 2/3rds of the way up, with no hole.

              But yes, you're exactly correct- that style of valve would not properly work with a siphon.

              Doc.
              Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
              The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
              Paintball in the Movies!

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                #11
                Doc, remember that accident where someone used too much loctite, and it plugged the safety vent... leading to a fatal accident.

                They sued the company that sold the tank, even though nothing was wrong with the tank. Someone removed the valve to install an anti-siphon, globbed on too much loctite, and never bothered to properly retorque the threads when valve screwed back on.

                The kneejerk reaction within the industry was to take all the tank threads in inventory, and cut a groove in the threads, on top of the existing vent hole. So that if the same situation happened again, the tank would vent properly. But the infuriating thing was that.... they made it impossible to install an anti-siphon, forcing people to look for older pre-cut valves.

                And now everyone uses tons of loctite, even though tank manafacturers like Catalina are against it. Proper torque, and no loctite is the recomendation, since loctite damages threads, and is the #1 reason for hydro failure. (damaged threads fail visual inspection). Since then, you sometimes find valves with just the groove, and no hole, etc. You just have to keep an eye out.

                just grinds my gears.

                but to the OP, I probobly made a hundred siphons at "Adventure Games" back in the 90s. We would take some microline (the 1000psi kind, not the lp tubing). It was the same line we used to repair 68-specials internal line. Then we would put CP fittings at both ends. One end would screw into the valve, and the other end would serve as a "weight" so that it can draw liquid regardless of orientation. You want the line as long as possible before the CP fitting hits the bottom. I'd also put a fat oring around the CP fitting so its not as noisy when it "clinks" the side

                Comment


                  #12
                  I really like the oring idea.
                  Originally posted by MAr "... Nish deleted it..."
                  Originally posted by Painthappy "...I like what nish did..."
                  Originally posted by Axel "coffee-fueled, beer-cooled."
                  Originally posted by Carp "Nish's two brain cells"
                  Master Jar-Jar

                  Comment


                    #13
                    Originally posted by Hp_lovecraft View Post
                    Doc, remember that accident where someone used too much loctite, and it plugged the safety vent... leading to a fatal accident.
                    -Oh, I understand the reasoning behind it, it's just that I never personally saw one that had both hole and groove. Most of my old ones just had the hole, a very few of the last 'new' ones I handled had a groove, but I suspect by the time both started filtering my way, CO2 in general was well on it's way out. (Personally, I haven't used CO2 since 2012, save in 12-grams, and it's probably been five years since I even filled a tank for a friend.)

                    Doc.
                    Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
                    The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
                    Paintball in the Movies!

                    Comment


                      #14
                      Even if it has a hole, that's nothing a tap and plug screw can't fix

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                        #15
                        In honour of this liquid co2 related thread, I wanted to show off one of the guns I used this weekend at Wasaga Frosty’s big game. I figured with some name like Frosty’s , I had better not show up with anything less a co2 cloud spewing beast!
                        '96 RF Mini Cocker, '95 RF Autococker, 68-Automag Classic, Banzai Splash Minimag, Gen-E Matrix, Shoebox Shocker 4x4, Montneel Z-1, Tippmann Pro-Carbine, Tippmann Mini-Lite, Tippmann Model-98, Tippmann 68-Special, Spyder .50 cal Opus/Opus-A , Tippmann .50 Cal Cronus , Gog Enmey .50 cal , Tippmann Vert ASA 68-Carbine, Bob Long Millennium, ICD Grey Green Marble Splash Alleycat Deluxe (runs liquid co2) , Halfblock 2K4 Prostock Autococker , 2K RF Sniper II

                        Meleager7 Feedback: https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...ager7-feedback

                        Mel Eager Productions, Paintball Videos: https://www.youtube.com/@meleagerproductions9082

                        Comment


                        • Meleager7

                          Meleager7

                          commented
                          Editing a comment
                          Fantastic! That was my first time playing with a montneel , man , it’s a surprisingly fast little gun! The gun was really consistent at the chrony too. I just wished I had more co2 , I only had a 12oz siphon tank that Jordan whipped up for me, and I went through it pretty quick

                        • Chappy

                          Chappy

                          commented
                          Editing a comment
                          When people tell me co2 can’t be that consistent I smile and think of all the chrono refs who swore the damn thing must be broken…

                        • Cunha
                          Cunha commented
                          Editing a comment
                          Looks awesome I like the foregrip.
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