I recently finished building a pneumatic marble gun using a 1/8" threaded pressure gauge. I drilled the appropriate size hole into my air tank and tapped it accordingly. I covered the threads with plumber's tape and screwed it in. It is easy to turn and when I pressurize my cannon air is leaking through the hole I screwed it in to. Any help on how to seal the hole would be much appreciated. I tried applying epoxy around it and it still leaks.
Thank you.
Leaky gun
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Thanks for the advise.
Last edited by papa_smurf on Mon Feb 19, 2007 2:10 am, edited 1 time in total.
Hey some times you need 4-5 layers of teflon tape and pipe dope.
But if there is any question re-tap larger.
Did you use the right size drill?
When tapping PVC the drill can be slightly smaller but not over size.
Good luck. I don't want your gauge in flight.
But if there is any question re-tap larger.
Did you use the right size drill?
When tapping PVC the drill can be slightly smaller but not over size.
Good luck. I don't want your gauge in flight.
I'd recommend taking the guage out, clearing all the teflon tape away, and globbing silicone sealant all over the guage threads and screwing it back in. Doing this has stopped over 10 leaks on threads for me.
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Well now, I don't think I can remove the gauge because I put epoxy putty around it to try to seal it. I'm not sure if it worked or not, because I need a new valve to be able to pressurize it. I'm crossing my fingers and I don't know when I can buy a new valve, so I'm really nervous.
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okay, save yourself loads of trouble in the future and buy yourself a 1/4" and 1/8" npt tap. They work lightyears better than just drilling and screwing the piece in.
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-Collin Mockery
Who's Line is it Anyway
Borrow money from a pessimist, he won't expect it back.
How come the measurement mentioned (1/4" and 1/8" npt tap) are smaller on my drill bit chart, yet its larger on the actual item (gauge, pressure relief valve, schrader valve)? A 1/4" drill bit is size of a sharpie point, but the gauge with 1/4" thread is wide as a penny. So what am I missing here?
HELP!!
HELP!!
Pipe sizes are weird, and I have no idea why the tap sizes are a lot bigger than drill bits, but I do know that pipe sizes go by the ID, so a 1/8" threaded steel pipe should have a 1/8" ID, except it's actually about 1/4." I just go with it, I don't care why it's like that.