paintball equipment
paintball equipment
me and a few buddies are picking this up as a new hobby. i've played before so i already know i love it, but we used crappy wal mart guns and whatnot back then, and we played in the woods. we're gonna start palying indoors and in leagues - do any of you guys who play know of some decent equipment for me and my buddies to pick up? i'm not sure what brands are good, what types of things are worth the extra money and what aren't, whats a good accessory to buy that actually makes the game more enjoyable and isnt just a cool looking gizmo, etc.
anyone got any advice on what to buy?
anyone got any advice on what to buy?
How much money you willing to spend?
Right now the hot gat is the new 05 Angel Speed ($995)
Check this movie out: http://www.bjelectric.com/images/speedtest.wmv
A loader (to quickly feed the balls to that monster) is gonna cost ya ~$125, a descent air system will be another $150-$200. A good barrel kit will be another $150-$200 (A must, most stock barrels suk)
Then you gotta get a pack and pods (figure ~$50), pants ($50-$100), mask ($60+), jersey ($40+), etc. etc. etc. (gloves, shoes, padding)
Then when you get to the field you gotta buy paint. A case (2000 rounds) of paint is $50-$80 plus air fills are usually a buck/1000PSI (tank usualy hold 4500PSI)
It's an expensive hobby. Lemme know if you need somemore info!
Right now the hot gat is the new 05 Angel Speed ($995)
Check this movie out: http://www.bjelectric.com/images/speedtest.wmv
A loader (to quickly feed the balls to that monster) is gonna cost ya ~$125, a descent air system will be another $150-$200. A good barrel kit will be another $150-$200 (A must, most stock barrels suk)
Then you gotta get a pack and pods (figure ~$50), pants ($50-$100), mask ($60+), jersey ($40+), etc. etc. etc. (gloves, shoes, padding)
Then when you get to the field you gotta buy paint. A case (2000 rounds) of paint is $50-$80 plus air fills are usually a buck/1000PSI (tank usualy hold 4500PSI)
It's an expensive hobby. Lemme know if you need somemore info!
Here's a few pix of me and my daughter at a tourney we played at a couple months ago.
I'm shooting an 04 Angel Fly with an Empire ReLoaderB loader, a Powerlyte Scepter barrel kit and a Nitro Duck Xtreme adjustable air system. "Chica" is shooting the 03 Angel Speed with a ReLoaderB, an Empire Barrel kit and an Air America adjustable air system. There's ~$3000 worth of stuff there!
I'm shooting an 04 Angel Fly with an Empire ReLoaderB loader, a Powerlyte Scepter barrel kit and a Nitro Duck Xtreme adjustable air system. "Chica" is shooting the 03 Angel Speed with a ReLoaderB, an Empire Barrel kit and an Air America adjustable air system. There's ~$3000 worth of stuff there!
- Phoenix Red
- DBB Fleet Admiral
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Ballsy to post pictures of your daughter, even in taliban-approved attire :p
I really like paintball, but I can't afford it however, I would chime in with a bit of sensible advice. Don't go stir crazy with the gun. If you can't reliably hit a moving target the size of an apple, a more expenisve barrel is not going to change that, and breaks count whatever you shot it with.
If you are very accurate under stress in "real" situations (ie not target shooting, game shooting) then yes, the fancy gear will make a difference, but generally speaking you being new means you don't shoot bullseyes from the hip. In my experience, the quality of the ammo makes as much difference, and that's raelly not something you control unless you always go to the same club. You buy their paint.
I really like paintball, but I can't afford it however, I would chime in with a bit of sensible advice. Don't go stir crazy with the gun. If you can't reliably hit a moving target the size of an apple, a more expenisve barrel is not going to change that, and breaks count whatever you shot it with.
If you are very accurate under stress in "real" situations (ie not target shooting, game shooting) then yes, the fancy gear will make a difference, but generally speaking you being new means you don't shoot bullseyes from the hip. In my experience, the quality of the ammo makes as much difference, and that's raelly not something you control unless you always go to the same club. You buy their paint.
Very true. I'm doing some research to pick out a few good guns to start with.
Spyders/Pirahnas have always been a favorite, as far as starter guns go. The problem with them is that they break-down and require frequent maintenence after a few thousand shots.
I'll post more tonite, as I'm at werk now and we're having some networking issues that are demanding my attention...
Spyders/Pirahnas have always been a favorite, as far as starter guns go. The problem with them is that they break-down and require frequent maintenence after a few thousand shots.
I'll post more tonite, as I'm at werk now and we're having some networking issues that are demanding my attention...
- Nitrofox125
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The Tippman 98 Custom is an excellent choice, if for nothing else than the fact that they never break! Plus you can customize the heck outta them!
Forget about the flatline barrel though, it's a gimmick that only works under a very limited set of circumstances, ie. long distance with nothing in the way. Even if it makes it to the 'target', the ball is moving so slow that at the point of impact it probably won't break. (known as a 'bounce', in paintball lingo)
And like I said earlier, the Spyder/Pirahna family of sear-trippers are probably the most popular of starter guns. But when they start to break down, it's a never ending battle to keep up with the constant maintenence.
I should know, my first gun was a Pirahna EXT. It worked fime for about 3 weeks then it started chopping balls and double firing (which then chopped even *more* balls!) It took $45 in parts and few hours of work to get it running right again.
If you can spring for a few hundred more (~$500), The Indian Creek BKO has been a pretty good first-time 'electro' marker (gun) for a lot of people.
Forget about the flatline barrel though, it's a gimmick that only works under a very limited set of circumstances, ie. long distance with nothing in the way. Even if it makes it to the 'target', the ball is moving so slow that at the point of impact it probably won't break. (known as a 'bounce', in paintball lingo)
And like I said earlier, the Spyder/Pirahna family of sear-trippers are probably the most popular of starter guns. But when they start to break down, it's a never ending battle to keep up with the constant maintenence.
I should know, my first gun was a Pirahna EXT. It worked fime for about 3 weeks then it started chopping balls and double firing (which then chopped even *more* balls!) It took $45 in parts and few hours of work to get it running right again.
If you can spring for a few hundred more (~$500), The Indian Creek BKO has been a pretty good first-time 'electro' marker (gun) for a lot of people.
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Here's a quality rig for a bit under 3g's. The only complaints I've heard is that they're louder than most other paintball guns and they only shoot red paintballs.
If you want to win tourny's you gotta go with the best. I promise, you'll be the last man standing.
http://conspiracyx0.tripod.com/weapons3/R700.htm
Buy some real firearms, you wieners.
If you want to win tourny's you gotta go with the best. I promise, you'll be the last man standing.
http://conspiracyx0.tripod.com/weapons3/R700.htm
Buy some real firearms, you wieners.
Hey Marge! How ya doin!
And about the flatlines...
And about the flatlines...
Forget about the flatline barrel though, it's a gimmick that only works under a very limited set of circumstances, ie. long distance with nothing in the way. Even if it makes it to the 'target', the ball is moving so slow that at the point of impact it probably won't break. (known as a 'bounce', in paintball lingo)