Airsoft Canada
http://triggerairsoft.com/shop/

Go Back   Airsoft Canada > Discussion > Upgrades & Modifications
Home Forums Register Gallery FAQ Calendar
Retailers Community News/Info International Retailers IRC Today's Posts

Cyma ak47s

:

Upgrades & Modifications

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old December 19th, 2012, 01:38   #1
Zack The Ripper
 
Zack The Ripper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: CFB Shilo, MB
Send a message via MSN to Zack The Ripper
Cyma ak47s



I just bought the CYMA AK47S from a Toronto retailer who shall remain nameless (won't post the link because non-AV'ed chums can still view this thread). I will be picking it up on Friday, December 21st (could be good, or bad luck..).

I'm new to AK's as I have only run M4 platforms mainly, as well as a G36 a long time ago and my current baby, my SCAR-L. As such, I'm rather noobish when it comes to the AK's of airsoft. I want to make this a good starter AK that will compete or even out-do my G&G SCAR.

I have done some searching through the Upgrades & Modification threads to see what I could gather up, but I would still like "a fresh take" on what some experienced AK users may have for advice on what should be upgraded internally either immediately or down the road, and plain and simply what they are doing right now with their rifles that have been working very well for them.

I have also heard that these CYMA rifles shoot rather hot out of the box (I've read numbers as high as 450fps) and want to know if this is common place that way I can snag an M110 or M105 when I pick it up and have it swapped in. I am also curious how a 7.4V LiPo will do in this bad boy. I know it will work as I have seen videos, had buddies tell me so, and read posts on the forum saying so: I'm just curious as to how much faster I will accumulate wear and tear on my stock internals. I'm generally not one to open my gearboxes up to fiddle around with them; I let the gun docs do that, so I just want a general idea of what I should look out for.

I know this seems like such a broad spectrum of questions, so please, any information you have that may be helpful, please post it so I can let my spongy brain absorb as much knowledge as possible.

Cheers!

Zack
__________________
Guardians of Asgaard
Zack The Ripper is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 01:43   #2
Styrak
 
Styrak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Saskatoon, SK
Send a message via MSN to Styrak
You should run it as is and see how it performs. It's probably just fine in stock form.

CYMA makes a good AK.
__________________

Airsoft Sales and Repair/Upgrade Services
Styrak is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 06:38   #3
TheHappy1
 
TheHappy1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Greenfield Park, Québec
Yeah, my Cyma AK AIMS shoots straight and far with no modification.
TheHappy1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 09:00   #4
Zack The Ripper
 
Zack The Ripper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: CFB Shilo, MB
Send a message via MSN to Zack The Ripper
What about the stock FPS rating? Is that something I should maybe downgrade? I don't want it shooting over 400fps.
__________________
Guardians of Asgaard
Zack The Ripper is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 12:37   #5
MaciekA
 
MaciekA's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Portland, Oregon, USA
You should be okay running a 7.4V LiPo in one of these, though I would recommend also upgrading your connector type to Deans if you are doing so. Like the other guys said, I would run it for a while and see how it does until you figure out your nitpicks.

That said, my personal first order of business with one of these would be to improve the shimming, redo the greasing, and ensure the pinion/bevel alignment is good. The motors in these CYMAs are typically high torque neo motors that can handle nearly anything you throw at them, so all you really need to focus on in an AK like this is precision alignment of everything in the gearbox (shim/pinion/bevel), AoE (sorbo pad, better piston), and power delivery (wiring/connectors/mosfet/battery). From what I've seen of MADDOG's CYMA AKs, you don't really need to replace the hopup or anything like that... These shoot decently far and accurate out of the box.

I nearly got the same AK back during the early fall (Я люблю складной автомат Калашникова!) but decided to go with another AK with a larger battery compartment (full stock, to make space for my monster LiPos and MOSFET). I just finished working on it today on my day off and it should see a game in the new year. Good luck with yours.
__________________
"Mah check"

Now you know

MaciekA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 13:20   #6
Zack The Ripper
 
Zack The Ripper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: CFB Shilo, MB
Send a message via MSN to Zack The Ripper
Good to know about the 7.4's. I was planning on upgrading to deans, all of my other AEGs use mini tamiya and I just don't like it.

So, as far as airsofters go I'm a bad boy when it comes to internal knowledge (thank the lord for friends and gun docs). Let me see if I have this right. Out of the box I should change to deans, have the gear box reshimmed and realigned, and change the wiring? If I change the wiring from what is likely copper, what should I change it to? I don't have a solder set nor have I ever used one, so this is something I'll have to get one of the Bad Karma boys or a gun doc to do.

Any other suggestions? Kinda glad to hear these are workhorses out of the box.

EDIT: as well, how is the FPS out of the box? Is it actually under 400fps as advertized or should I downgrade the spring?
__________________
Guardians of Asgaard

Last edited by Zack The Ripper; December 19th, 2012 at 13:25..
Zack The Ripper is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 18:59   #7
Styrak
 
Styrak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Saskatoon, SK
Send a message via MSN to Styrak
Quote:
Originally Posted by ZackTheRipperC View Post
EDIT: as well, how is the FPS out of the box? Is it actually under 400fps as advertized or should I downgrade the spring?
That depends where you got it from, who imported it and when, etc.

There's no telling unless you chrony it.
__________________

Airsoft Sales and Repair/Upgrade Services
Styrak is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 19:22   #8
Cliffradical
butthurt for not having a user title
 
Cliffradical's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Winnipeg
If the nameless retailer is the one I think it is, that AK is likely older stock being blown out and almost certainly has an M140 in it, and should be downgraded.
Springs are cheap and having an extra around is always a good thing, so even if you end up not needing to use it you haven't wasted anything.

As said previously, a good shim and lube job is probably all you need to do. Easy to accomplish if you're swapping the spring anyway.
It's a good idea to pull the inner barrel and hopup chamber out of the gun and check to see that everything is aligned properly, but that's it really.
You can think about replacing the compression system, gears, and motor sometime, but I wouldn't worry about that until it breaks.
Cliffradical is offline   Reply With Quote
Old December 19th, 2012, 21:04   #9
Zack The Ripper
 
Zack The Ripper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: CFB Shilo, MB
Send a message via MSN to Zack The Ripper
Good to know. Yeah I called the retailer today just to see what the FPS rating is and they told me the same thing. I'm getting it cronoed when I got in to pick it up and will probably just grab an M110 or an M105.
__________________
Guardians of Asgaard
Zack The Ripper is offline   Reply With Quote
ReplyTop


Go Back   Airsoft Canada > Discussion > Upgrades & Modifications

Bookmarks

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


Airsoft Canada
http://triggerairsoft.com/shop/

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:47.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.