paintballHomepaintballPicturespaintballTechnicalpaintballTournamentpaintballRecreationalpaintballFieldspaintballStorespaintball
paintballBeginner InfopaintballNews And ArticlespaintballLinkspaintballResourcespaintballVideopaintballContact UspaintballSearchpaintball
WARPIG Tech Talk - Air

Re: comp. air co2 and nitrogen

In Reply to: comp. air co2 and nitrogen posted by stockton on June 19, 2003 at 01:17:44:


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ WARPIG Tech Talk - Air ]

Posted by:
Jason "Zippy" Finnie

on June 19, 2003 at 14:14:41

: ok guys, i know this has been asked before but please bear with me. just bought my first marker, tipp. a-5, started with a 9 oz. co2, have already upgraded to a 20 oz. now i'm wondering about comp air, a friend uses it, the gun seems to perform the same. any opinions? and is a comp. tank and a nitro tank the same? some of the mags i read just show nitro but i'm not sure if they are or can be used with air.

@@@ HPA tanks, or high pressure air tanks, that you are reffering too will hold both Nitrogen and compressed air. In fact most places you go actually use compressed air rather than nitrogen.

As far as use on an A-5, you'll get more shots per fill running the 20oz CO2, and the gun will run just fine.


Follow Ups:


Post a Followup

Show your name as:

E-Mail address (eg: joeschmoe@aol.com):


Show your e-mail address?

Your Password:


Don't have a password? CLICK HERE - Forgot your password? CLICK HERE

Subject:

Subject:Message:


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ WARPIG Tech Talk - Air ]


Copyright © 1992-2019 Corinthian Media Services.

WARPIG's webmasters can be reached through our feedback form.  All articles and images are copyrighted and may not be redistributed without the written permission of their original creators and Corinthian Media Services. The WARPIG paintball page is a collection of information and pointers to sources from around the internet and other locations. As such, Corinthian Media Services makes no claims to the trustworthiness or reliability of said information. The information contained in, and referenced by WARPIG, should not be used as a substitute for safety information from trained professionals in the paintball industry.