RT valve heat; normal?

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  • OrangeDude
    Registered User
    • Jul 2001
    • 188

    #1

    RT valve heat; normal?

    Hi guys,
    Recently I got a cool mag from this guy named Rob and it heats up a lot when I'm shooting. Is that normal? Its a minimag with a z-grip and a RT valve. I dry shot it yesturday and I noticed that the rt valve was hot to the touch. I didn't think a few shots would make so much heat. I didn't put oil in it yet. You guys got any suggestions?
    thanks.
    Dang it I'd wish they'd would allow me to play paintball SF's Golden Gate park!!!
  • Zo

    #2
    on the AGD page it says that with HPA it will warm up due the the molicules moving faster in the compressed air.

    Comment

    • OrangeDude
      Registered User
      • Jul 2001
      • 188

      #3
      Hey Zo,
      Can you give me the exact link to that page.
      thanks!
      Dang it I'd wish they'd would allow me to play paintball SF's Golden Gate park!!!

      Comment

      • Zo

        #4
        This is it:http://www.airgun.com/rtchrono.html
        its for the rt gun but should be the same for the retro valve.

        Comment

        • MikeCouves
          The Enemy
          • Aug 2001
          • 1877

          #5
          Hey. I think that's normal. When you fill up your nitro tank...for about a couple minutes after the tank air inside will be warm due to friction(I dunno, it's weird). That may cylce through the marker and warm up the valve. I need someone that really knows what is going on to back me up.


          ------------------
          Minimag
          Double Trigger
          ANS Shark Gill
          14" SP All American
          16" Custom Products
          20 oz. (Flatline 68 for Christmas!)

          Come back here!
          "If everything is under control your not moving fast enough."

          Comment

          • Zo

            #6
            its the movement of the molecules that warms up the tank

            Comment

            • Army
              Moderator of DOOOOOOOOMMM!

              • Oct 2000
              • 5785

              #7
              Nothing to it but friction from fast moving, high pressure air trying to get around corners. It's the same phenomena as a meteorite burning up in the atmosphere.

              ------------------
              EIB

              Comment

              • FeelTheRT
                Registered User
                • Jun 2001
                • 2950

                #8
                Mike and Zoe: nope, just put it this way ... it heats up when it gets compressed quickly, and gets cool if uncompresses quickly.
                FS: RARE Adrenaline Angel LED #8



                ~~~ FS:ASA, angled drop ~~~
                ~~~ FS: DYE sight rail && Angel LCD bolt

                Comment

                • DarkPhoenix
                  Advanced Fire Support
                  • May 2001
                  • 719

                  #9
                  As air is compressed, it heats up. As it cools, air expands. That is why when fields do what I term as "quick fills" of a HPA/N2 bottle, the bottle heats up rapidly. If they fill it to 3000 psi on a quick fill, wait for the bottle to cool down, you will then notice that the bottle pressure has went from 3000psi to around 2500psi. I prefer doing a staggered fill on a HPA bottle, it may take a little more time but you get more air into the bottle.

                  ------------------
                  RT Pro P/F
                  w/ AGD Flatline

                  "The BEAST"
                  "No-Rise" E-mag
                  Level 10 Bolt
                  AGD Flatline 91cu in/4500psi
                  Black HALO B

                  "Red Heatseeker"
                  Red to Clear Fade Freak Factory Impulse
                  68/4500psi Max-Flo
                  Red HALO B

                  Comment

                  • MikeCouves
                    The Enemy
                    • Aug 2001
                    • 1877

                    #10
                    Well we are arguing about the tank. Not his valve. Would that make the valve warm too? Hot even? Because it only takes about a minute or so for the tank to cool off when my friend fills it.


                    ------------------
                    Minimag
                    Double Trigger
                    ANS Shark Gill
                    14" SP All American
                    16" Custom Products
                    20 oz. (Flatline 68 for Christmas!)

                    Come back here!
                    "If everything is under control your not moving fast enough."

                    Comment

                    • DarkPhoenix
                      Advanced Fire Support
                      • May 2001
                      • 719

                      #11
                      Sorry about that. The valve becomes hot during strings of rapid fire because since the RT valve is also a regulator, it recieves the air under pressure, thus the air has no chance to cool down or expand. There are no low pressure chambers on a Automag, not only would this allow the compressed air to cool but it would also present a larger volume of air, but I must digress.

                      ------------------
                      RT Pro P/F
                      w/ AGD Flatline

                      "The BEAST"
                      "No-Rise" E-mag
                      Level 10 Bolt
                      AGD Flatline 91cu in/4500psi
                      Black HALO B

                      "Red Heatseeker"
                      Red to Clear Fade Freak Factory Impulse
                      68/4500psi Max-Flo
                      Red HALO B

                      Comment

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