The weight of the boom at that angle would load the circuit. When a hose breaks it is usually a gush of fluid. A pinhole to the cylinder/fitting makes the spray. I have seen defective cylinders do this exact thing in field tests. It is almost always in the tubing welds on the cylinder.
Edit: also the lock valve is built into the butt of the cylinder. So hose failures would only leak fluid trapped in them. It would have to be cylinder damage to both allow the boom to fall, and have pressure enough to spray.
I don't believe so because I do not believe even a .308 would penetrate a medium pressure cylinder of that size. The spray was more like a pinhole was caused from a strike on the tube or weld.
The weight of the boom at that angle would load the circuit. When a hose breaks it is usually a gush of fluid. A pinhole to the cylinder/fitting makes the spray. I have seen defective cylinders do this exact thing in field tests. It is almost always in the tubing welds on the cylinder.
Edit: also the lock valve is built into the butt of the cylinder. So hose failures would only leak fluid trapped in them. It would have to be cylinder damage to both allow the boom to fall, and have pressure enough to spray.
No argument there. I only have field use experience regarding this type of equipment
Would that verify the type of round as well, which would be .22 or .223/5.56? Any other caliber would make a larger hole than that.
I don't believe so because I do not believe even a .308 would penetrate a medium pressure cylinder of that size. The spray was more like a pinhole was caused from a strike on the tube or weld.