Originally posted by fullofpaint
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Why side feed?
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It's already been said, but centerfeed didn't really become the preferred option until Halos hit the market. Side feed gets you 3 extra balls in the stack and is way more reliable with gravity and Revvy hoppers. That's why the below monstrosities were popular upgrades at the time.
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Originally posted by lew View Post
Regardless of how much paint one wants to sling, sighting down the side (10-11 o'clock) works fine. Most Snipers are vertical feed. Pretty hard to use your previous shots as tracers when your ROF is diminished, but that doesn't seem to stop most from getting first round hits. With good paint, I can long ball an opposing player at a hundred feet with a vertical feed. Not much of a problem.
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We all wanted sites in the 80s and early 90s. Dot sites were pretty standard. Case in point, the first center feed: the brass eagle barracuda:
it mounted a site rail ABOVE the hopper
it made sense when you were shooting one ball at a time, and not “walking “ your balls on target
also, for the left/right thing, consider the mini-mag. It’s main selling point was , at the time, it was the -only- way to have a right feed PF ‘mag. Standard PF automag were all left feed and everyone hated them.
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Originally posted by Hp_lovecraft View PostWe all wanted sites in the 80s and early 90s. Dot sites were pretty standard. Case in point, the first center feed: the brass eagle barracuda...
“It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” -Krishnamurti
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Originally posted by lew View PostRight, but, by the mid- to late-'90's, sights had dramatically fallen out of favor for the reasons that Signs mentioned above and yet side feed was still de rigeur.
But even in the late 90s, most players were still in the woods. Speedball was becoming more accepted, but it wasnt the standard yet. Newer players still expected sites, and aiming. We remember all the cool high end guns from the era, but 95% of guns using were brass eagle and tippmann.
Another thing to think about, feed and hopper sizes were still not standard in the 90s. You had a variety of feed sizes, and it was the standard for elbows to come with "sleeves" to match to your gun. Plus the oddballs like the stingray, and tippamnns. And small hoppers using a smaller size were still commonly shipped with guns. It was common to have a whole variety of elbows in your gear bag to match different guns with different hoppers.
Good times.
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Originally posted by lew View Post
Right, but, by the mid- to late-'90's, sights had dramatically fallen out of favor for the reasons that Signs mentioned above and yet side feed was still de rigeur.
So this is an old thread I created in the Before Times, and I thought it was worth recreating. Flipping through some my old magazines, it occurred to me that the catalog ads did a pretty good job of documenting what guns were available at various times of the sport's brief history, and how much they cost. I had the idea of
The Angel LCD and Bob Long Defiant both had sight rails, despite being centerfeed.
Heck, the Brass Eagle Rainmaker had two sight rails!
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Originally posted by Hp_lovecraft View PostGood times.
I remember that 50 rd. hopper that came with my Spyder Classic package from Sportsmans Guide. Threw that sucker in the trash first opportunity I had since all my cousins were using VL hoppers.
Stimulating conversation, folks. I'm always glad to hear another's point of view.“It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” -Krishnamurti
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Originally posted by The Inflicted View Post
Sight rails were still ubiqutious, though, and were basically omnipresent on the first two generations of electronic guns.
So this is an old thread I created in the Before Times, and I thought it was worth recreating. Flipping through some my old magazines, it occurred to me that the catalog ads did a pretty good job of documenting what guns were available at various times of the sport's brief history, and how much they cost. I had the idea of
The Angel LCD and Bob Long Defiant both had sight rails, despite being centerfeed.
Heck, the Brass Eagle Rainmaker had two sight rails!“It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” -Krishnamurti
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Just throwing out an idea here but my guess is that right feed might have suck because most people were right handed, so they would reload with their right hand.
Remember the earliest direct feeds were DIY jobs with pipes angled out of the side or back. My bet is there was nothing more to it than the guy that made it like his that way.
Once that happens you need to risk a lot of money and convince people that your new really high feed, right where they look to aim, is better and they can aim some place else.Originally posted by MAr "... Nish deleted it..."
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Originally posted by lew View Post
I had a way of cutting through the BS, and I always wondered "did anyone bother to make an offset sight mount for those markers?" Apparently, it took the industry as a whole a long while to realize that paintball guns can't utilize a sighting system very effectively.
In the 80s, fields mimicked combat scenarios, and you might have rules like "arms and leg shots dont kill you, but you can't move or shoot until the doc finds you". That stuff went away in the 90s.
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