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> Pump Shotty Plunger Fix, For all those with broken plungers
ice
post Jan 10 2009, 05:35 AM
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At the last war I etended, PA war, some was using a PAS that more or less exploded on them during a round. We opened it up and found the plunger rod snapped in half. the kid didn't want it any more, and offered it to anyone that did want it, seeing as he couldn't repair it and generally didn't care. It was given to me to take home, and here's what I did to it.

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First, if your break is near were mine is (at the plunger head), clip off the four tabs around the shaft that still remains on the plunger head.

Take a piece of wire about roughly the size of the twist ties that the gun is packaged in (which is actually what I used, worked great) and insert it into the long end of the plunger (the plunger it hollow).

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Take roughly 6 inches of cpvc and slide it onto the long end of the plunger. Then glue the two ends of the plunger together (with super glue), while making sure the cpvc stays on the plunger.

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Let that dry a couple minutes, then take your hotglue gun and glue the living hell out of the plunger with it. Make sure to get the plunger head a good bit as well. Once you have it good and gunked up, slide the cpvc over it, compress and give it time to dry. Really, the super glue alone would have held for a good while, but this is just an insane reinforcement (you might argue that it's not because it'sonly hotglue, but it pretty much became one solid piece with the plunger).


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Add springs, and YOUR DONE.

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This has been done for over a week now and has been shot over 200 times, with no sings of weakening at all. It has the stock and LS springs in it.

This post has been edited by ice: Jan 10 2009, 05:39 AM


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ace of nerf
post Jan 10 2009, 07:13 AM
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Thank you. Two days ago my plunger broke , and this is just what I needed. Good job!


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Carbon
post Jan 10 2009, 07:27 AM
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Nice repair. Have you noticed a decrease in range, with the increase in plunger mass?


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Mr BadWrench
post Jan 10 2009, 07:45 AM
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I don't think it will hold.... the hotglue could have made the plunger tube hot enough to release the superglue.. cyanacrolate does not resist temperatures well...

You should have just used the hotglue, or used an epoxy that was temperature resistant....

Something that is much stronger is if you use goop and shrink tubing. I get heavy wall shrink tubing from the truckstop and I use it in layers with marine goop..... last time I fixed something similar it was an rc plane, I slipped 3 pieces of shrink tubing over the rod and as far out of the way as possible, I jammed a piece of CF rod inside after applying goop with a small paintbrush. I covered the outside of the rod with goop and slipped the first piece of shrink tubing over.. I used a turbo lighter to shrink the tubing then covered that with goop and slipped the next pieces of tubing over with layers of goop between...

It was a good idea to put something down the middle to reinforce and I do not know how big the cavity inside the rod is but I would try using some carbonfiber rod or stiff steel rod instead of somethign flexible, Ca glue does not bond well to flexible materials..

Don

This post has been edited by Mr BadWrench: Jan 10 2009, 07:46 AM


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Axle-Gear
post Jan 12 2009, 04:30 PM
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QUOTE(Mr BadWrench @ Jan 10 2009, 10:45 AM) *

I don't think it will hold.... the hotglue could have made the plunger tube hot enough to release the superglue.. cyanacrolate does not resist temperatures well...


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This has been done for over a week now and has been shot over 200 times, with no sings of weakening at all. It has the stock and LS springs in it.


Hmm...

In my limited experience with plastic repairs, if it doesn't break the first two or three times, it'll probably hold for a good, long while. I sort of wish a similar technique could be used on a broken trigger piece to my RFR.
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rokor
post Jan 12 2009, 04:36 PM
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Axle, you are one of the stupidest members here... You obviously don't have much experience because everything weakens when pressure is being put on it. The material will have say in how long it lasts, but it will still weaken.


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Mr BadWrench
post Jan 12 2009, 07:13 PM
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QUOTE(Axle-Gear @ Jan 12 2009, 07:30 PM) *


In my limited experience with plastic repairs, hold for a good, long while. I sort of wish a similar technique could be used on a broken trigger piece to my RFR.


your experience does not tell you that a RFR is not worth fixing does it?


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post Jan 12 2009, 07:25 PM
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QUOTE(rokor @ Jan 12 2009, 07:36 PM) *

Axle, you are one of the stupidest members here... You obviously don't have much experience because everything weakens when pressure is being put on it. The material will have say in how long it lasts, but it will still weaken.


Rokor, don't be a douche.


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