paintballHomepaintballPicturespaintballTechnicalpaintballTournamentpaintballRecreationalpaintballFieldspaintballStorespaintball
paintballBeginner InfopaintballNews And ArticlespaintballLinkspaintballResourcespaintballVideopaintballContact UspaintballSearchpaintball
WARPIG Tech Talk - High End Paintguns

Question about relative accuracy


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ WARPIG Tech Talk - High End Paintguns ]

Posted by:
Clayphoto

on December 24, 2003 at 13:27:03

I am in the process of seeing if I need a new gun and done all the basic tech manual and equipment research I care to do right now. I also plan on going to the fields and asking to borrow backup guns to get some hands on feel for differences between guns. But to keep things in perspective when I shoot the $300-550 guns, I have one question to ask all you experts.

Make the assumption that you are using N2 air sources, maintaining your gun per service manual recommendations, timed your gun properly, using good paint and bore match, and playing with stock internals for your gun.

Is it fair to say that in terms of accuracy a WGP Vertical Autococker, Rat Impulse Jr, and Automag RT Pros are all guns that approach the physical limits of what a modern paintball projectile can achieve? In other words, if an Autococker gets a shot cluster of 18" at x range , will the other two get similar results? And will other guns costing hundreds of dollars more see only marginal increases in accuracy?

This is asked with accuracy being the only variable. Ignoring rate of fire, comfort, ease of maintenance, ect.

Thanks in advance!

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 - High End Paintguns ]


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.