FX Have you experienced this?

Can't be too uncommon because they stock it.
20231125_112344.jpg
Came back from the FX shuffle like this. At least I got my gun back. It's a miracle the bottle didn't dislodge!
 
yes lol

pics in post number 17

Irritating as hell yes but if the threads cave/strip your valve would also have to be malfunctioning to make a bottle rocket if it is working normal and functioning the valve should just close when the threads cave and shut of the air flow as if you had unscrewed the damn thing haha . It is and has been a well known thing for them since release in my own personal opinion. I guess they never changed it because it was a none life threatening thing in there view I dunno ?????? I could be wrong on the reason it was never addressed I am just guessing of course so take it with a grain of salt as I am not professional haha . I received quite a few in trades with no mention of this being the case prior to the agreement haha.

I just kept buying the damn replacements and then from there own out would depressurize the entire system prior to taking/removing the bottle off so it was not under any pressure at all . This put an end to it for the next few years I had them . I no longer have a dreamline lol .

I hope this helps in some way !
 
That looks like one of my Mavericks after I put silicon oil on the threads, got lucky and cleaned it off after a day.
Well as I stated above I am no expert by any means . I am always up to learning more . Is what you are implying that the silicon oil some how adds/ causes the threads to gaul or fail ? If there is merit to this I guess fx possibly viewed this to user error and maybe that is why they never changed the design . I have no clue but just found it to be a common thing in the used market .

If that is the case can you elaborate a little on how this occurs for an old country bunkin like myself Please ? I would appreciate the lesson haha . I actually thought it was a design flaw in material or something I have no clue but did figure out a way to avoid it as mentioned earlier haha. (y):coffee:
 
Well as I stated above I am no expert by any means . I am always up to learning more . Is what you are implying that the silicon oil some how adds/ causes the threads to gaul or fail ? If there is merit to this I guess fx possibly viewed this to user error and maybe that is why they never changed the design . I have no clue but just found it to be a common thing in the used market .

If that is the case can you elaborate a little on how this occurs for an old country bunkin like myself Please ? I would appreciate the lesson haha . I actually thought it was a design flaw in material or something I have no clue but did figure out a way to avoid it as mentioned earlier haha. (y):coffee:
Honestly, I can't answer, but I can say and there will be some that will venimently call me names for this or being a liar, but they can go ..... themselves. That said, put some silicon on my threads, a day or so later I read, ON THIS FORUM, that silicon oil is not for metal to metal anodized contact. My threads had been fine when I did it, afterwards the anodizing was GONE. Personally, I'd prefer to err on the side of caution. I also believe that there is close to zero need for silicon oil in an airgun. Everyone is worried about Dieseling, IMHO you aren't going to have that simply coating threads or an o-ring with a light coat of oil. My personal favorite is Mobile 1, the lightest you can get. Mobil 1 is an excellent lubricant and very very very long lasting. It doesn't attack anodizing or Nitrile 0-rings. I use it on my AMP regulators on my Mavericks and have had ZERO issues. Can I say the o-rings last longer, no I can't but I haven't had to mess with them in over a year. I've used the stuff on my Pew-pews for over a decade they just go pew and my air guns still work. My opinion is, if it slides lube it with something slippery. I use the stuff on my $20,000 embroidery machines, some are over 20 years old and are still running perfectly and quiety. I use to have to lube daily now...once a month and it's been a LOT of years. The ONLY reason not to use oil on moving parts is if you're crawling in the dirt or sand, from what I've seen, our guns are as far removed from that as humanly possible.
 
Honestly, I can't answer, but I can say and there will be some that will venimently call me names for this or being a liar, but they can go ..... themselves. That said, put some silicon on my threads, a day or so later I read, ON THIS FORUM, that silicon oil is not for metal to metal anodized contact. My threads had been fine when I did it, afterwards the anodizing was GONE. Personally, I'd prefer to err on the side of caution. I also believe that there is close to zero need for silicon oil in an airgun. Everyone is worried about Dieseling, IMHO you aren't going to have that simply coating threads or an o-ring with a light coat of oil. My personal favorite is Mobile 1, the lightest you can get. Mobil 1 is an excellent lubricant and very very very long lasting. It doesn't attack anodizing or Nitrile 0-rings. I use it on my AMP regulators on my Mavericks and have had ZERO issues. Can I say the o-rings last longer, no I can't but I haven't had to mess with them in over a year. I've used the stuff on my Pew-pews for over a decade they just go pew and my air guns still work. My opinion is, if it slides lube it with something slippery. I use the stuff on my $20,000 embroidery machines, some are over 20 years old and are still running perfectly and quiety. I use to have to lube daily now...once a month and it's been a LOT of years. The ONLY reason not to use oil on moving parts is if you're crawling in the dirt or sand, from what I've seen, our guns are as far removed from that as humanly possible.

Thank you for responding ! We can just leave it be with no worries at all . I wish you the best .

I was all prepared for a scientific = Masters Degree Re education or something to that effect lol . :giggle::coffee: