This is a recap and continuation of a troubleshooting thread that I mistakenly continued in the For Sale Section:
History: I sold Moodog a Carter Buzzard that I failed to properly test before shipping it out. He encountered issues with it, and put it up for sale. Moodog was entirely in the right, the problem was caused by me in the first place, and I bought it back from him. I should never have sold it in the first place without proper testing and full disclosure.
Issue recap: Per Moodog:
Troubleshooting steps taken after I received the gun back.
The sear being unable to latch, when the TPC was adjusted all the way inward, was caused by the powertube being too long. When the TPC was adjusted all the way in, the tip of the powertube was hitting the inside of the front of the TPC not allowing the bolt to come back far enough to latch the sear. When cocking the gun, the hammer stopped 3/32" away from the shoulder on the powertube. I trimmed 5/32" off the powertube to resolve that issue. I adjusted the TPC all the way in to test, the sear latches with no issues. Also, Carter's hammer has a lip on the inside (right at the back) that stops the TPC from exiting through the rear. Unlike a Phantom which can pass all the way through.
As for velocity, I'm using a red main spring and a very light valve spring. With my 650psi output HPA tank, it is shooting 238-246 fps with the TPC adjusted all the way in. Still a work in progress, I need to get a better selection of springs. And make me a Carter velocity adjust tool..... And maybe some different powertubes......
What kind of power tube was it? Carters usually do well with a cut down phantom power tube. I wouldn’t try to squeeze velocity out with a heavy mainspring fully compressed. It’s a good way to snap the power tube[/quote]
Phantom on top.....
Inside diameter:
- Phantom: .172
- Carter: .145
Diameter where it enters the valve cap:
- Phantom: .248
- Carter: .274
Diameter of tube forward of collar:
- Phantom: .248
- Carter: .235
Length of tube, forward of collar:
- Phantom: 1.386
- Carter: 1.520
The Phantom power tube will work, but there is a bit of slop due to the difference in diameters. Changing just the powertubes causes a velocity drop when the Phantom tube is used.
All three power tubes:
The Lapco is very similar to the one for the Phantom, it is just longer.
The Phantom nut will not thread into the Carter. The Carter takes a larger diameter.
Some more twiddling....
1. Carter powertube, heavier than red main spring, stock silver valve spring, TPC set to middle of run, 800psi output 13/3000 with a fresh fill. Shooting 212 to 220fps....
2. No change to parts in step 1, TPC one more turn in, shooting 220 to 228fps.
3. Change just the valve spring to a very light one, shooting 238-241fps.
4. Change tank only to a 625psi output, charged to 3000psi, expected the velocity to drop, and it didn't! It went up to 248-255psi....
5. Mounted a 12-gram changer, stuck in a twelvie, charged it up, no leaks. Expected a change, but not a great one. Wrong again! <shakes head> Velocity dropped to 215-217, very consistent over 10 shots.
Am I going to have to put a regulator on this and find the sweet spot? Yeeshhhh.....
Thanks for all the help! I appreciate it......
1. Ensured TPC was at center of travel.
2. Clipped 2 turns off the lightest spring I have.
3. Stiffer than red main spring.
Inlet holes:
Powertube completely closed with spring installed:
Results (3 different tanks):
Low = Velocity of the slowest shot
High = Velocity of the highest shot
Average = Average velocity of all shots
Extreme Spread = High velocity minus low velocity
Standard Deviation = Standard deviation of the string of shots
Ten shots taken on all strings
1. HPA, 800psi output, First Strike 13/300
- Low: 238.3
- High: 266.2
- Average: 252
- Extreme spread: 27.88
- Standard deviation: 8.83
2. HPA, 625psi output, Riva 68/4500
- Low: 242.8
- High: 262.5
- Average: 251.6
- Extreme spread: 19.68
- Standard deviation: 6.08
3. Co2, 12-gram
- Low: 216.2
- High: 236.2
- Average: 227.5
- Extreme spread: 19.98
- Standard deviation: 6.24
Note: The port between the air chamber and the valve chamber on the Carter is 3/32", that on the Phantom is 3/16".
History: I sold Moodog a Carter Buzzard that I failed to properly test before shipping it out. He encountered issues with it, and put it up for sale. Moodog was entirely in the right, the problem was caused by me in the first place, and I bought it back from him. I should never have sold it in the first place without proper testing and full disclosure.
Issue recap: Per Moodog:
It leaked and did not shoot at a playable velocity. I have since fixed the leak but regardless of what I do I cannot get it to shoot above 170FPS. I have tried all sorts of different spring combinations, but I believe the problem is something with the internals. When you adjust the IVG more inward the sear no longer catches on the bolt, despite having standard nelson springs.
Originally posted by Socalpumpballer
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Originally posted by Chuck E Ducky
As for velocity, I'm using a red main spring and a very light valve spring. With my 650psi output HPA tank, it is shooting 238-246 fps with the TPC adjusted all the way in. Still a work in progress, I need to get a better selection of springs. And make me a Carter velocity adjust tool..... And maybe some different powertubes......
Originally posted by Socalpumpballer
Phantom on top.....
Inside diameter:
- Phantom: .172
- Carter: .145
Diameter where it enters the valve cap:
- Phantom: .248
- Carter: .274
Diameter of tube forward of collar:
- Phantom: .248
- Carter: .235
Length of tube, forward of collar:
- Phantom: 1.386
- Carter: 1.520
The Phantom power tube will work, but there is a bit of slop due to the difference in diameters. Changing just the powertubes causes a velocity drop when the Phantom tube is used.
All three power tubes:
The Lapco is very similar to the one for the Phantom, it is just longer.
Originally posted by RedLeaderSB
Some more twiddling....
1. Carter powertube, heavier than red main spring, stock silver valve spring, TPC set to middle of run, 800psi output 13/3000 with a fresh fill. Shooting 212 to 220fps....
2. No change to parts in step 1, TPC one more turn in, shooting 220 to 228fps.
3. Change just the valve spring to a very light one, shooting 238-241fps.
4. Change tank only to a 625psi output, charged to 3000psi, expected the velocity to drop, and it didn't! It went up to 248-255psi....
5. Mounted a 12-gram changer, stuck in a twelvie, charged it up, no leaks. Expected a change, but not a great one. Wrong again! <shakes head> Velocity dropped to 215-217, very consistent over 10 shots.
Am I going to have to put a regulator on this and find the sweet spot? Yeeshhhh.....
Originally posted by Socalpumpballer
1. Ensured TPC was at center of travel.
2. Clipped 2 turns off the lightest spring I have.
3. Stiffer than red main spring.
Inlet holes:
Powertube completely closed with spring installed:
Results (3 different tanks):
Low = Velocity of the slowest shot
High = Velocity of the highest shot
Average = Average velocity of all shots
Extreme Spread = High velocity minus low velocity
Standard Deviation = Standard deviation of the string of shots
Ten shots taken on all strings
1. HPA, 800psi output, First Strike 13/300
- Low: 238.3
- High: 266.2
- Average: 252
- Extreme spread: 27.88
- Standard deviation: 8.83
2. HPA, 625psi output, Riva 68/4500
- Low: 242.8
- High: 262.5
- Average: 251.6
- Extreme spread: 19.68
- Standard deviation: 6.08
3. Co2, 12-gram
- Low: 216.2
- High: 236.2
- Average: 227.5
- Extreme spread: 19.98
- Standard deviation: 6.24
Note: The port between the air chamber and the valve chamber on the Carter is 3/32", that on the Phantom is 3/16".
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