March 12th, 2009, 15:30 | #16 |
GBB Whisperer
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If your high ROF gun is chewing up pistons, then that means your gun is not properly built.
If you install an aluminum piston, one/some/all of these things will happen: 1) Your aluminum piston will strip almost as fast as a polycarbonate one 2) The teeth between the sector gear and the bevel gear will strip 3) Your pinion gear will strip 4) The sectored teeth of the sector gear will shear off Ultimately, the result won't be good UNTIL YOU FIX YOUR PROBLEM. The primary cause of stripped pistons in a high ROF setup is an imbalance somewhere, causing the sector gear to collide with the piston before it has returned to battery. Either speed up the forward motion of the spring (but not too much, or it could make the situation worse), short stroke it, and/or remove the second tooth. |
March 12th, 2009, 15:31 | #17 | |
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Perfectly fine for an MP5, with the short barrel, half the piston stroke is wasted anyways, covering the distance from the end of the cylinder till the port closes. It's a great way of increasing ROF, durability and reliability in ultra high speed setups. |
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March 12th, 2009, 15:34 | #18 | |
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When you short stroke, you just remove teeth from the sector gear, but that means you have to make sure your piston has metal teeth for the last one that the modified sector gear will engage. Prometheus and Modify are good candidates, because 7 of the last teeth are metal. |
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March 12th, 2009, 15:54 | #19 | |
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March 12th, 2009, 15:55 | #20 | |
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I honestly think the problem is that the 9.6v battery coupled with the systema turbo motor and m90 spring produces way too much torque. I think the problem is with the Systema motor itself. When I ran this rig without the mosfet it was overcycling like hell (and breaking pistons). Now it's just breaking pistons from time to time. (I play airsoft about 4 times a week out here since I work at night - Just saying because the mosfet cure was not too long ago)The motor has a lot of torque. When I ran on a EG700 or even EG1000 I had no problems with piston breakage. As soon as I put the turbo motor in I have been breaking a piston ass end every other game.... about 2k or so bbs later. I could be wrong... please tell me if I am because I'd rather have a polycarb any day of the week. The current piston I have in the gun has lasted me 3 games so far... I think it's a good one but the reason for this post is that I just KNOW that it's going to end up failing. I honestly just want to know the con's of the aluminum piston. I think M902323 (sorry I can't remember the numbers) summed it up perfectly when he said that it's really a choice between breaking a piston in the sort run or breaking the gears in the long run. I honestly just don't want to operate on the gun right now for a long time... it's a time sink. Is the danger to the gears that great? I have prometheus high speed gears installed. Thanks for all the input. |
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March 12th, 2009, 16:04 | #21 | |
GBB Whisperer
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Fix that issue of collision FIRST, before considering upgrading to an aluminum piston. Otherwise, you'll be wasting money with yet another destroyed piston, OR the added stress on the gears will strip their teeth, assuming the piston doesn't get stripped first.
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Advanced Airsoft Armaments and Enhancements Quick to the gun, sure of your grip. Quick to the threat, sure of your shot. Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas Accuracy, Power, Speed Last edited by ILLusion; March 12th, 2009 at 16:08.. |
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March 12th, 2009, 16:09 | #22 |
I'd love to increase to a M100 but they are illegal to buy in Japan (anything that produces over 1j with 0.2s is). Retailers won't sell them and if you get caught with one in your air gun you are looking at 10 years or more in a Japanese jail. (to be honest most of the guys I play with have m100s or m110s but they bought them a long time ago when they were legal).
Being a white guy in Japan doesn't help either. I'd be all over the front page of every freeken newspaper out here if I got caught with something illegal. That said, I'll chop out the second tooth and see how that goes... I don't feel comfortable short stroking the setup. |
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March 12th, 2009, 16:10 | #23 |
GBB Whisperer
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Try shaving the 2nd tooth first, on a cheap piston. Run it. If it strips, then you'll have to short-stroke.
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March 12th, 2009, 16:12 | #24 |
What do you think of adding washers to the spring guide to preload the spring?
Think that would help? |
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March 12th, 2009, 17:05 | #25 |
Well yeah, but you buy a special sector gear for that wouldn't you? Not machine/file your full sector gear?
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March 12th, 2009, 17:18 | #26 |
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That can work as well. Just make sure you don't preload the spring so much that the piston can't pull back all the way. There's only so much the spring can compress.
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March 12th, 2009, 17:19 | #27 | |
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People have been modifying their own for years. There's no reason why you can't modify it yourself. |
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March 13th, 2009, 02:48 | #28 |
Echigoya carries them. Order one online. They ship to Japan... as they are in Japan.
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March 13th, 2009, 03:55 | #29 | ||
A Total Bastard
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Quote:
YouTube - Shortstroke Mod on ICS MP5 SD6 -ASTKilo23-
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Last edited by Blackthorne; March 13th, 2009 at 03:57.. |
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March 13th, 2009, 22:45 | #30 |
I think if your rof is too high there isn't a piston out there that can handle such demanding use. Maybe you should lower the rof (lower the battery voltage or change to torque gears).
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