Quote:
Originally Posted by Trbo323
gosh i get tired of this conversation sometimes, as i said above, the flatline, does not add any aditional usable range....your kill zone is not extended if the paint bounces. argue it all you want, physics say "no" so your basically trying to argue against physics. yes the shots are in a straight line but that is not always an advantage, sometimes you need to arc shots over obsticals or down into bunkers where a straight shot will not help, sometimes the oposite is true. you can bunker people reguardless of the barrel you have, and if you can not get breaks on people then people are able to shoot back. it does not have very good accuracy since there is backspin on the paint it is known as "floating" as for the paint to use with it, well something with a thick shell which is gennerally the cheap to mid level stuff, if you shoot higher quality tourny paint that has a thin shell it will blow up in the barrel since it has to go through that S
|
I'm just going off what i have actually seen. My Brother and I both just bought brand new A5s. He has the flat-line i don't. We have taken them into a field a few times and take turns shooting each other with them. I will fire mine at him, Then pick his up and fire at him again to compare. We are using paint form the same case. Everyone that has done this agrees my brothers gun is shooting straighter for longer. My balls start hooking and slicing well before his does.
If i back him up so I am hitting him around 4 out 5 shots. Then pick my gun up I'm lucky to hit him once because my balls are going all over the place at that point.
When have done it a few times now and evertime we get more hits from farther with his gun. Thats what I'm baseing this off.
Maybe we will try switching the barrel onto my gun next time to see if it the guns that are making the difference.
You are correct that you need to use a harder shell paint. It is picky with the paint it needs and breaks cripple the gun and you can't hit anything after a barrel break