I was wondering where do you cut on an Overload?
Is this correct?
Check Valve Freezing On Overload
- Drenchenator
- Posts: 807
- Joined: Fri Jun 18, 2004 12:00 pm
Hasbro recently has been making this easy; it usually colored. The pressure relief valve is probably the small colored section. However, the Overload is a plain separate firing chamber air pressure water gun. A pressure relief valve removal for a smaller air pressure gun is not recommended; the chance for damage is greater while the performance is not much greater. It's like trying to make a tricycle perform like a monster truck. It's not happening.
Edit: Wrong word
Edit: Wrong word
Last edited by Drenchenator on Wed Jul 18, 2007 1:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
The Drenchenator, also known as Lt. Col. Drench.
- Silence
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- Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:01 pm
Agreed.Drenchenator wrote:Hasbro recently has been making this easy; it usually colored. The pressure relief valve is probably the small colored section. However, the Overload is a plain separate firing chamber air pressure water gun. A check valve for a smaller air pressure gun is not recommended; the chance for damage is greater while the performance is not much greater. It's like trying to make a tricycle perform like a monster truck. It's not happening.
But still, the Overload has a decent amount of flow for a modern water gun (look at the iSoaker.com review - range is similar for both stream nozzles). With water guns with poor flow, large nozzles have terrible range, and modification doesn't help because it breaks up the smaller streams. With a water gun like this, you could do some power mods and use the larger nozzle or create your own.
Still, the internals might be quite flimsy. It takes a lot of extra pressure to see a satisfactory range improvement, and I don't know whether the internals are strong enough to do that. 3rd-millenium water guns aren't very reliable.