CPS 1000 pump leak
- MilkMan
- Posts: 310
- Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 12:00 pm
CPS 1000 pump leak
I just took my CPS 1000 out today to test it out for the summer and I noticed that is has a semi-considerable pump leak. When I pump it, water leaks out the pump and it starts dripping while also leaving the pump shaft damp. I think its always had this problem but it used to be very mild. It is much worse than it was last summer. Please help.
"Anything with a nozzle and a pump is good enough for me." <--------------- Same lying signature 3 years and counting!
- m15399
- Posts: 224
- Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2005 1:54 am
Take the pump out of the shaft and look at the oring. If it's in good condition, you may able to wrap a few layers of electrical tape around the shaft and stick the oring back on to fix it. The elctrical tape should make the oring fit the shaft better. If the oring is worn out or torn or something, you will probably have to replace it.
Could you take a picture of the pump? I'm not sure what kind of seal it is (I'm guessing oring, though).
Could you take a picture of the pump? I'm not sure what kind of seal it is (I'm guessing oring, though).
- Silence
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- blub man
- Posts: 33
- Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 8:50 pm
- joannaardway
- Posts: 855
- Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 10:04 pm
Yes, Silicon grease is good, but it is not the ultimate solution to these things - it could be a different problem with similiar symptoms.
Never say "I had the exact same problem" - say "I had a problem rather like that" - the former is invariably false.
Besides - wasn't your problem with a PR type?
Never say "I had the exact same problem" - say "I had a problem rather like that" - the former is invariably false.
Besides - wasn't your problem with a PR type?
"Over the hills and far away, she prays he will return one day. As sure as the rivers reach the seas, back in his arms again she'll be." - Over the Hills and far away, Gary Moore
"So many people have come and gone, their faces fade as the years go by. Yet I still recall as I wander on, as clear as the sun in the summer sky" - More than a feeling, Boston
"So many people have come and gone, their faces fade as the years go by. Yet I still recall as I wander on, as clear as the sun in the summer sky" - More than a feeling, Boston
- blub man
- Posts: 33
- Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 8:50 pm
- Silence
- Posts: 3825
- Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:01 pm
As for the part about the leak getting worse this summer, that's probably just the rubber of the O-ring drying. If that is the case, then cracking could also become a problem. I suggest actually replacing the O-ring this time, as opposed to using silicon lubricant (no offense, of course, blub man).
In addition, because Storm guns use two-stroke pumps, it might have been slightly harder to fix the seal (though this is just speculation). With standard soaker pumps, replacement O-rings have been tried and tested with success.
In addition, because Storm guns use two-stroke pumps, it might have been slightly harder to fix the seal (though this is just speculation). With standard soaker pumps, replacement O-rings have been tried and tested with success.
- Silence
- Posts: 3825
- Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:01 pm
Well, wearing down of the rubber was definitely part of the problem, but much of it was that the rubber dried out. I know for a fact that people have complained that their (commercial, not homemade) CPS soakers had ruptured bladders, and this problem was attributed to the aging and drying out of the rubber (in the PC, not in the O-ring). Basically, the rubber could not expand--or in this case, it couldn't keep a seal--as well as it once could due to the drying effect, so it cracked instead. Maybe using silicon lubricant or a sealant, which is more convenient on O-rings than it is on CPS bladders, will seal in the moisture and prevent drying. If that is the case, then silicon lubricant is an excellent product after all.
- joannaardway
- Posts: 855
- Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 10:04 pm
A pump on a PR gun will pump air - a CPS pump will pump water...
The pumps do work quite differently, but grease is always a good bet with a pump.
The pumps do work quite differently, but grease is always a good bet with a pump.
"Over the hills and far away, she prays he will return one day. As sure as the rivers reach the seas, back in his arms again she'll be." - Over the Hills and far away, Gary Moore
"So many people have come and gone, their faces fade as the years go by. Yet I still recall as I wander on, as clear as the sun in the summer sky" - More than a feeling, Boston
"So many people have come and gone, their faces fade as the years go by. Yet I still recall as I wander on, as clear as the sun in the summer sky" - More than a feeling, Boston
- SSCBen
- Posts: 6449
- Joined: Sat Mar 22, 2003 1:00 pm
I've never heard of this happening. Could you point out a case to me? From what I've seen, most bladders rupture from overpressurization due to a broken valve or because someone was sticking something in the chamber.I know for a fact that people have complained that their (commercial, not homemade) CPS soakers had ruptured bladders, and this problem was attributed to the aging and drying out of the rubber (in the PC, not in the O-ring). Basically, the rubber could not expand--or in this case, it couldn't keep a seal--as well as it once could due to the drying effect, so it cracked instead.
- Silence
- Posts: 3825
- Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:01 pm
@ blub man: I was referring to the silicon lubricant covering the O-ring and sealing in the moisture only if you spray it all over the rubber. In your case, I think it was only sprayed on the inside of the tube, unless it accidentally got on other parts of the O-ring (though it might be a bit too late for holding in the remaining moisture...).
@ Ben: I don't quite remember where I got the information about aging and drying rubber--maybe it was somewhere in the general CPS design review at iSoaker.com--but you can see this for yourself: I'm sure everybody here has played with rubber bands sometime in his or her life, or even just stretched them for some purpose; and I've noticed that quite a few of the older rubber bands have lost their rubbery feel. They don't stretch as smoothly, and they often expose cracks on the surface when stretched greatly; and worst of all, they can break very easily. That's just about the best example out there.
@ Ben: I don't quite remember where I got the information about aging and drying rubber--maybe it was somewhere in the general CPS design review at iSoaker.com--but you can see this for yourself: I'm sure everybody here has played with rubber bands sometime in his or her life, or even just stretched them for some purpose; and I've noticed that quite a few of the older rubber bands have lost their rubbery feel. They don't stretch as smoothly, and they often expose cracks on the surface when stretched greatly; and worst of all, they can break very easily. That's just about the best example out there.
- Silence
- Posts: 3825
- Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:01 pm
Sorry about that, and thanks for pointing it out. How did you apply the grease? Did you use a swab on a string or on a stick to put it inside the pump tube, or did you just coat the O-ring?
Note: O-rings aren't that hard to obtain; my phone book's yellow pages list a category of stores that only sell O-rings. One of them must be the perfect size.
Note: O-rings aren't that hard to obtain; my phone book's yellow pages list a category of stores that only sell O-rings. One of them must be the perfect size.