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Yes, fibre wraps are the only truely viable cylinders for testingSteel or aluminium I should say* carbon fibre steel ones are the only ones expensive enough to bother testing.
Note if you do buy a new cylinder instead of testing then do shop around.Mine are aluminium, I thought would need to replace in 18 months. It does say needs to be tested every 5 years on them, hopefully the guy at the Scuba shop knows about the exemption, because he does check the dates on the cylinders before filling.
Cheers
G
He is on that website list, but told me he doesn't test airsoft/paintball bottles himself, and would need to send it away and not economically worth it to test.
It was covered in the UKPSF law pages, however they decided to keep to 5 years on their HPA1 air safety document (this was to minimize confusion of real steel cylinders at 5 years and whether an aluminium was fully aluminium)Is there any link to the 10 year excepmtion? I looked at that Facebook link in the thread Lewis created a while back and only mentions 5 years.
I've got a Tippmann M4.
Cheers
G
That’s unclear on the link, but is due to timing of articles on the original UKPSF source and when TPED revised the aluminium periodIt is confusing it says Steel and Aluminium bottles must also be tested five years from the manufactured date.
But at the bottom of the same page it says
TEN YEARS FOR ALUMINIUM BOTTLES
The actual marking sequence can vary between manufacturer and type of cylinder.Thank I’ll have another look but what kind of markings should I look for?