Anyone know where I can get new Air America style burst discs? They seem to just be little pieces of metal held in by a nut, so I figure they probably have some industrial use, but I have no clue where to go about getting spares
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Burst discs?
Collapse
X
-
You have an early "two piece" burst disc, that was made up of a hollow setscrew and a loose disc of brass or bronze. That's the way burst discs were back in the day (and not just in paintball) but there was an issue with people constantly overfilling CO2 tanks and blowing the discs.
And, instead of learning to properly fill the tanks so that didn't happen, they would stack two discs in there so that wouldn't happen.
That was, of course, extremely dangerous, so the industry went with what was called the "unified" burst disc. The disc is crimped to the end of the bolt, so you replace the whole works. And morons can't stack them to keep 'em from going off.
Just pull the disc you have and just swap it with a 'unified' of the appropriate pressure. Old style replacement discs are extremely hard to find these days.
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!
- Likes 1
-
Originally posted by DocsMachine View PostYou have an early "two piece" burst disc, that was made up of a hollow setscrew and a loose disc of brass or bronze. That's the way burst discs were back in the day (and not just in paintball) but there was an issue with people constantly overfilling CO2 tanks and blowing the discs.
And, instead of learning to properly fill the tanks so that didn't happen, they would stack two discs in there so that wouldn't happen.
That was, of course, extremely dangerous, so the industry went with what was called the "unified" burst disc. The disc is crimped to the end of the bolt, so you replace the whole works. And morons can't stack them to keep 'em from going off.
Just pull the disc you have and just swap it with a 'unified' of the appropriate pressure. Old style replacement discs are extremely hard to find these days.
Doc.
Comment
-
All the unified discs I'm aware of, stick out of the port. The old versions like you're talking about, if they blow, while they save the tank, the single point makes the bottle spin off like a rocket. The Unified ones have cross vents to blow the air in two, four or six different directions, cancelling the impulse for it to go rocketing away.
I have a very limited few of the old separate discs in my collection, but they're all CO2, and either 1800 or 2200 rated. You need just a bit more than that.
The short rail might be your best bet. Ir try contacting the "new" Air America and see if they can set you up with a replacement.
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
-
Ducks: Those discs should be printed with a value- they have ratings just like the Unified ones. Was it a CP inline reg? I can't recall if CP made a tank reg.
If it was an inline reg disc, it's probably rated for 1800 psi. If it's a tank reg, it's rated for whatever the tank was. (4.5K for a 3K tank, etc.) The Apoc will need a 7K or 7.5K disc.
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
-
If that's the case, they should work just fine. Are they stamped with numbers?
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
Comment