Do any of you's use HPA for your nelsons? If so, which tanks do you recommend?
I would like to use HPA on my Nelson markers. I am looking at something like a 13/3000 or 22/3000. I don't dislike CO2, but HPA is really convenient (you just can't beat free, all-day, self-serve air), and provides consistent pressure to the marker (which means once I have the marker set up at 280 fps, it should stay pretty close to that velocity - assuming a method of ball-to-barrel matching is used)
But there is a pressure problem.
Nelson markers were designed to run on CO2 which delivers between 750 psi @ 60ºF and 1,100 psi @ 90ºF. Most of the HPA bottles I see are regulated to 500, 650, or 800 psi. 800 psi is about what I would get from a CO2 tank at 65ºF (±). I've played paintball on a 65º day with a 7 oz CO2 tank, and my recollection was that my marker's performance was pretty ... meh.
I would like to use HPA on my Nelson markers. I am looking at something like a 13/3000 or 22/3000. I don't dislike CO2, but HPA is really convenient (you just can't beat free, all-day, self-serve air), and provides consistent pressure to the marker (which means once I have the marker set up at 280 fps, it should stay pretty close to that velocity - assuming a method of ball-to-barrel matching is used)
But there is a pressure problem.
Nelson markers were designed to run on CO2 which delivers between 750 psi @ 60ºF and 1,100 psi @ 90ºF. Most of the HPA bottles I see are regulated to 500, 650, or 800 psi. 800 psi is about what I would get from a CO2 tank at 65ºF (±). I've played paintball on a 65º day with a 7 oz CO2 tank, and my recollection was that my marker's performance was pretty ... meh.
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