
the fire should not be able to get to the tank.
First it would have to travel back through a series of small diameter tubes which would be full of the liquid. To actually burn, it would need oxygen. In the tubes it woulnt actually be able to travel either way.
If it actually did get into the tank, the same thing might help, ie there would only be a small amount of air in the tank, the rest liquid. However if say, the cap is off the top then it would burn. However if it is car washer fluid, it doesnt burn quickly enough to actually explode, rather burn inside the tank and hopefully just melt the gun rather than blow up in your face.
Even so, if i were doing it, id test it by remote control the first time. IE stick it in a workmate vice and push the trigger with a long pole :D
( ,
Sat 5 Jun 2004, 10:15,
archived)
First it would have to travel back through a series of small diameter tubes which would be full of the liquid. To actually burn, it would need oxygen. In the tubes it woulnt actually be able to travel either way.
If it actually did get into the tank, the same thing might help, ie there would only be a small amount of air in the tank, the rest liquid. However if say, the cap is off the top then it would burn. However if it is car washer fluid, it doesnt burn quickly enough to actually explode, rather burn inside the tank and hopefully just melt the gun rather than blow up in your face.
Even so, if i were doing it, id test it by remote control the first time. IE stick it in a workmate vice and push the trigger with a long pole :D