Had a 9+ hour drive from MI to MO to visit my brother. Just getting back to this.
All AGD valves are very robust regulators. Theoretically, all other things being equal (e.g., paint to bore match or lack thereof), any given setting on the velocity adjuster should result in the same velocity, regardless of input pressure. There may be some small nuances to this, but the point of a regulator is to control the input into something consistent and usable. Looking at the other end of the spectrum, say when your tank falls below 900 psi, the velocity won’t drop until you’re below the dump chamber pressure required to achieve that velocity. You’ll lose trigger reset force and have to shoot slowly (lack or recharge), but velocity should hold until about 550-600psi, if I recall correctly. So even though input pressure is below 900psi, velocity doesn’t drop.
Obviously, it’s best to fix the tank, but I’m not sure that was your issue.
Going back to the barrel (sorry, I’m fixated on that still), given the fix you implemented, it shouldn’t be hard to recreate the issue. The o-ring should only be there to keep the halves from coming loose, not for alignment. If you take the o-ring and Teflon tape off, is the barrel misaligned? If so, is there a lip/dam when looking down the barrel from breech end to tip end? If so, I’d shoot some paint through that in a different marker with a good tank.
Let us know results. Thanks.
Edit: Forgot to comment on the heat affecting velocity. This is from the valve’s extremely fast recharge rate. When the air first enters the dump chamber, reaches regulated pressure, and seals the reg seat, the air in the dump
chamber is at its hottest. The air cools, losing pressure, but only to a certain point until the shot is taken. I forget the exact numbers, but for example, shots taken at 15bps might be at 300fps, 10bps at 280, and 8bps and slower at 250fps.
This is why there is a chrono procedure for RT/X-Valves. Shoot and hold trigger back, position marker over chrono, release and pull trigger as quickly as possible. This simulates the velocity during rapid fire. If you chrono with normal single trigger pulls, you’ll likely see a 20-30fps drop compared to the rapid fire simulation chrono procedure.
All AGD valves are very robust regulators. Theoretically, all other things being equal (e.g., paint to bore match or lack thereof), any given setting on the velocity adjuster should result in the same velocity, regardless of input pressure. There may be some small nuances to this, but the point of a regulator is to control the input into something consistent and usable. Looking at the other end of the spectrum, say when your tank falls below 900 psi, the velocity won’t drop until you’re below the dump chamber pressure required to achieve that velocity. You’ll lose trigger reset force and have to shoot slowly (lack or recharge), but velocity should hold until about 550-600psi, if I recall correctly. So even though input pressure is below 900psi, velocity doesn’t drop.
Obviously, it’s best to fix the tank, but I’m not sure that was your issue.
Going back to the barrel (sorry, I’m fixated on that still), given the fix you implemented, it shouldn’t be hard to recreate the issue. The o-ring should only be there to keep the halves from coming loose, not for alignment. If you take the o-ring and Teflon tape off, is the barrel misaligned? If so, is there a lip/dam when looking down the barrel from breech end to tip end? If so, I’d shoot some paint through that in a different marker with a good tank.
Let us know results. Thanks.
Edit: Forgot to comment on the heat affecting velocity. This is from the valve’s extremely fast recharge rate. When the air first enters the dump chamber, reaches regulated pressure, and seals the reg seat, the air in the dump
chamber is at its hottest. The air cools, losing pressure, but only to a certain point until the shot is taken. I forget the exact numbers, but for example, shots taken at 15bps might be at 300fps, 10bps at 280, and 8bps and slower at 250fps.
This is why there is a chrono procedure for RT/X-Valves. Shoot and hold trigger back, position marker over chrono, release and pull trigger as quickly as possible. This simulates the velocity during rapid fire. If you chrono with normal single trigger pulls, you’ll likely see a 20-30fps drop compared to the rapid fire simulation chrono procedure.
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