To be honest dry firing the once accidentally will be unlikely to have buggered it. If its still shooting ok you probably have nothing too much to worry about.
Hi,
Just dry fired my new LGU :-(
I was just adjusting the trigger first stage spring tension on my 100 shot old LGU when the gun went off :-(
Please tell me it's not buggered now !!!
If yes, what will be buggered so I can buy the new bits.
It still shoots as I tested it. I was thinking of getting a NickG tuned piston when he replies to my PM. Will his kit replace what I may have buggered?
To be honest dry firing the once accidentally will be unlikely to have buggered it. If its still shooting ok you probably have nothing too much to worry about.
Ditto.
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Thank you for that.
I get my chrono next week, so I'll start checking it's power over time.
What exactly gets damaged after a dry fire in a springer?
No problem at all, just don't make a habit of it
God rest ye jelly mental men
Although it isn't something that you would do deliberately (and certainly not repeatedly), the odd dry fire will not harm your springer. Jim Tyler's fine workings demonstrated the choking effect to air flow in the transfer port, so piston bounce will still have occurred. Second piston landing maybe a little harsher.
Don't worry, it'll be fine.
"Super-tuned" guns with monster springs and opened out transfer ports won't fare as well, mind!
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No I won't make a habit of it !
I'm gutted
My guns lost its virginity
It's standard at the moment, but the TP has been opened to 3.2mm.
In Yea Olde Days the leather piston head was held on by a washer and a screw. If dry-fired the screw could end up hitting the end of the cylinder and cracking the piston or otherwise getting thread damage so that air would leak through the piston into the spring compartment. On rifles with tight tolerances the piston might biff the end of the cocking lever and bend the cocking lever or piece. On a cheap gun with a very heavy mainspring it might smack the breech/cylinder joint out and cause leaks or a complete failure. Also, in Ye Olde Days, lubrication was quite often 3-In-1 or light machine oil, which meant a spectacular diesel detonation when dry firing occured. This WILL cause spring damage etc as the piston flies the wrong way up the compression cylinder, in some cases enough to smash the trigger mechanism (OK these were where people had introduced inflammable 'substances' to the cylinder).
On a modern springer it MIGHT damage the piston head seal but doing it just once will probably not have that effect. I still hate it when the Ignorati do it, I've seen 'gunsmiths' do it in shops to demonstrate their complete lack of manners and springer knowledge.
Have a read of this. Don't take it as gospel but really there is no need for you to be overly worried about your dry firing accident.
https://www.pyramydair.com/blog/2006...amage-airguns/
Round my neck of the woods a certain gunshop if you ask to look at that brand spanking new springer on the shelf the sales guy will cock it and dry fire it right in front of you before handing it over
Consequently, I’ve never bought any rifles from that gaff
Thanks guys