• Hi Guest. Welcome to the new forums. All of your posts and personal messages have been migrated. Attachments (i.e. images) and The (Old) Classifieds have been wiped.

    The old forums will be available for a couple of weeks should you wish to grab old images or classifieds listings content. Go Here

    If you have any issues please post about them in the Forum Feedback thread: Go Here

servicing airsoft guns?

2 things....

Stuff of a few years back was probably made with some real metal inside and may have cost more than the £100 £200 guns of today...

Further more I doubt if they will outlast the Heidelberg Cylinder letterpress in front of me tonight - 55yrs+ built Ike a f*cking tank, doesn't need bolting to floor it is a beast of engineering that will probably still outlast most other machinery in my works place....

2 - Never ever say how well long my car/PC/gun has lasted for...

That is a red flag to the bull of fate, very risky

Yes I'm sure they are good worhorses, but sadly they all still wearing themselves bit by bit though some stuff is built to last longer than others plus a bit of fortune too

 
oh yeah, don't get me wrong, I still expect the UMP to explode everytime I go near it, but so far we're winning

 
The main thing is the shimming of the gears in the gearbox, if your AEG needs it, it can make a world of difference and extend your AEG's lifespan considerably, the rest you can do yourself with a bit of rubber-friendly silicon oil....

If you've noticed/if you notice a decline in your AEG's performance, then a service is worthwhile :)

Just so we're clear, lubricating the inside of your gearbox with silicone oil is like lubricating the inside of your car gearbox with fairy liquid.

Use grease, not oil.

 
Just so we're clear, lubricating the inside of your gearbox with silicone oil is like lubricating the inside of your car gearbox with fairy liquid.

Use grease, not oil.
Yea, "the rest" meant NOT THE GOD DAMN GEARBOX... just to be clear ;)

TBH if you're asking this question, don't go anywhere near the gearbox, I don't - I'd prefer an experienced tech to go there :P

 
TBH if you're asking this question, don't go anywhere near the gearbox, I don't - I'd prefer an experienced tech to go there :P
Disagree I say crack it open and learn how it works. Nothing in an aeg is complicated its 90% common sense.
 
im definately not confident enough to crack open a gearbox, maybe ill buy a cheap second gun i dont care about sometime and mess about but dont wanna mess with guns i like.

anyway so on an aeg where should i be spraying with silicone oil? and how often?

 
Disagree I say crack it open and learn how it works. Nothing in an aeg is complicated its 90% common sense.
If you want to learn how it works I'd educate yourself on it some other way than opening your own gearbox that you know nothing about (this is a metaphorical 'you' btw, not YOU ITH ;) )

Watch a YouTube video first, or watch a gun tech do it to your gun before bits of your gearbox ping around the room and it becomes an expensive fix.

 
Disagree I say crack it open and learn how it works. Nothing in an aeg is complicated its 90% common sense.
First hand knowledge is THE only real way to learn this stuff, but I would agree that doing it on your ONLY gun will almost certainly lead to an inexplicable failure. Such is the Law of Sod.

 
First hand knowledge is THE only real way to learn this stuff, but I would agree that doing it on your ONLY gun will almost certainly lead to an inexplicable failure. Such is the Law of Sod.
But only through failure do we really learn.
 
But only through failure do we really learn.
Indeed, but that failure will always happen the night before game day. Murphy's Second Law see, if multiple things can go wrong the worst one will always happen first.

 
Indeed, but that failure will always happen the night before game day. Murphy's Second Law see, if multiple things can go wrong the worst one will always happen first.
Been there was sat in my hotel room in February after the private game and changing my bucking and adjusting the gearbox alignment when I broke a connection. Soldering at 1.30 in the morning hoping not to set off the fire alarms. Always be prepared with spares and tools is the lesson learnt.

 
Use it as is......

it will very likely break or fail to operate smoothly at some point....

THEN have a go - nowt to lose so to speak

If it still goes pear shape - at least you tried so can buy new box/send to tech/buy new gun

If ya really suck at maintaining/service/repair of stuff, then maybe spend time doing overtime instead

but really should have a go yourself, on cheaper stuff and learn as you go

for what its worth - think I'm still learning something different on each gun I fix/break/fix/break....

 
honestly an AEG gearbox is really simple. REALLY simple. It's 3 cogs, a catch to stop it all going backwards and a motor.

 
honestly an AEG gearbox is really simple. REALLY simple. It's 3 cogs, a catch to stop it all going backwards and a motor.
True, but when someone with little or no mechanical aptitude decides to DIY a high speed setup it usually all goes horribly wrong!

The basic mechanics are simple but getting the timing right (and let's face it, remembering to put all the right bits back in the right place) is the trick to a working gearbox and one that works WELL.

 
True, but when someone with little or no mechanical aptitude decides to DIY a high speed setup it usually all goes horribly wrong!

The basic mechanics are simple but getting the timing right (and let's face it, remembering to put all the right bits back in the right place) is the trick to a working gearbox and one that works WELL.
if people can't disassemble something with at most 20 parts... then reassemble it correctly then really the gene pool could do without :)

 
if people can't disassemble something with at most 20 parts... then reassemble it correctly then really the gene pool could do without :)
Totally, but let's not forget that there's people that can't boil an egg without burning down their kitchen!

 
Totally, but let's not forget that there's people that can't boil an egg without burning down their kitchen!
That is what staff are for; the same with getting a tech to do all the skilled work :lol:

 
If you're slightly mechanically minded, then crack it open yourself with a YouTube guide.

If you're the sort of person to whom anything technical appears to run by witchcraft, then pay someone else to do it.

The amount of times I've pulled something apart only for someone to ask me if I know how it works, then I've responded with "not yet..." some people can, some people can't...

 
Back
Top