Earlier this month, as we came off the field from the first game there was this father and son waiting by the net watching, all geared up and ready to play their first ever game of paintball. They had their masks up on top of their heads. I noticed the son's mask and immediately stopped him to explain that what he had wasn't actually a paintball mask. Spoke with him and his dad for a bit and learned that they'd decided to get into paintball so they just hopped on Amazon, ordered some gear, and here they were. Dad had an actual paintball mask, an Empire X-Ray, but son had picked out what he thought was a cooler looking mask, probably branded ANYOUPIN or NINAT or somesuch. Both said "paintball" on their Amazon pages and they didn't have any reason to know any better. I recognized the son's mask as cheap Chinese junk commonly mislabeled for paintball despite being nowhere near ASTM F1776 compliant. They accepted my explanation and the field staff loaned the son a rental mask for free. I hate that they got ripped off like that.
What worries me more is that some of these mislabeled junk masks might slip through at a busy field, especially if staff are new and/or shorthanded. Often, field staff may be minimum wage high school or college kids with no particular interest in paintball who aren't likely to be familiar enough with the various masks to reliably spot the unsafe junk. So today I did something I have thought about for a while and threw together a quick and dirty field reference for the more common unsafe masks, which is attached as a pdf. Wondering what you guys think. If my buddy who is the senior ref at our local field likes it, I'll probably have some color prints made and laminated and donate them to the field as an aid to new staff members.
All the masks pictured in my rogues' gallery of dangerously mislabeled junk came from the first 4 pages of search results on Amazon for "paintball mask." I find that concerning.
What worries me more is that some of these mislabeled junk masks might slip through at a busy field, especially if staff are new and/or shorthanded. Often, field staff may be minimum wage high school or college kids with no particular interest in paintball who aren't likely to be familiar enough with the various masks to reliably spot the unsafe junk. So today I did something I have thought about for a while and threw together a quick and dirty field reference for the more common unsafe masks, which is attached as a pdf. Wondering what you guys think. If my buddy who is the senior ref at our local field likes it, I'll probably have some color prints made and laminated and donate them to the field as an aid to new staff members.
All the masks pictured in my rogues' gallery of dangerously mislabeled junk came from the first 4 pages of search results on Amazon for "paintball mask." I find that concerning.
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