Here are some pics of what should be in a tickler.
This is how it looks disassembled. The spring goes inside, the cap goes over the spring and screws on past the o-ring (which seals it up tight). As you tighten the cap, the spring pushes harder against the inside piston.

This is a picture of the piston (or whatever you want to call it). If you push on it with the end of a pen, it should depress and then spring back when you relieve pressure.

And this is where the spring goes.
(I'm not really sure why I took this picture.

Hope this helps. I suppose there could be a problem on the other side of your piston, but I've never disassembled the ticker that much, and I would even have any idea where to start.
This is how it looks disassembled. The spring goes inside, the cap goes over the spring and screws on past the o-ring (which seals it up tight). As you tighten the cap, the spring pushes harder against the inside piston.
This is a picture of the piston (or whatever you want to call it). If you push on it with the end of a pen, it should depress and then spring back when you relieve pressure.
And this is where the spring goes.
(I'm not really sure why I took this picture. Hope this helps. I suppose there could be a problem on the other side of your piston, but I've never disassembled the ticker that much, and I would even have any idea where to start.


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