Operation Manual

WARNING: ALWAYS KEEP THE MUZZLE
POINTED IN A SAFE DIRECTION
When the gun res, all the air exhausts from the tank
The cause for this is almost always a pellet that was not seated properly into the
breech. The skirt is blown against the breech face when high pressure air rst hits it
and it creates a high pressure air seal that forces the valve to remain open.
Air leaks from the rell clamp when lling the air tank
Is the rell clamp bleed valve closed?
Is the rell clamp tted squarely to the O-ring in the scuba tank I-valve?
Is the rell clamp thumbscrew tight?
The hand pump doesn’t seem to ll the air tank
Is the tank screwed tightly to the adapter on the pump?
Are all the adapter seals installed?
Is the brass bleed screw on the pump base closed?
It can be difcult to determine that the hand pump is lling the air tank when the
tank is empty. Air tanks are shipped empty to comply with the law. An empty air
tank doesn’t SEEM to be lling when you pump the pump. Actually it takes about 75
pump strokes before you notice that the needle on the pump’s gauge is slightly above
zero. Once the tanks starts to register a charge, you will notice that it takes 14 or 15
pump strokes to raise the tank pressure by 100 psi. That’s true at all pressure levels.
Troubleshooting