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New Vetgun III- anyone know how it works?
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Found the manual but it's not much help.
https://library.leedstone.com/forms/...l-V1.0_web.pdf
It does refer to the thing as "self-cocking" which would suggest a Rapide-type double action.
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Maybe they wouldn't need to be at that distance if they were blasting them at 400 FPS. Seems like there should be an easier way, but this is more fun.
And now a double trigger in case those fuckers try and run.
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I really want to see the advertising for the e frame version.
"For immunization of a whole hurd in seconds"
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Is that even 68 caliber? Looks larger
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They are.Originally posted by Trbo323 View PostIs that even 68 caliber? Looks larger
Should be 1.00 to 1.05 caliber.
https://www.sensorsone.com/sphere-vo...er-calculator/
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I can't comment on the legality, but it seems like it would be cheaper to make .68 VetCaps and just shoot the cows a few times to equal the same volume of pesticide
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Cheaper for the end user, possibly, but from Vetcaps perspective it's more to their advantage if people have to buy their proprietary gun to use their proprietary medicine; if you want to use their system you've got to buy their stuff. From a liability standpoint, they also don't have to worry about people shooting their capsules out of guns they didn't engineer, or vice-versa.
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I hadn't thought of it the other way around. I probably wouldn't appreciate having a ball break on my mask and getting a mouth full of cattle tick medicine because some absent minded farmer mixed up his paintballs and VetCaps.
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I seem to recall the Vetcap rounds are something like 26mm- as Inflict notes, nominally an inch.
You can get "inert" balls, both for testing/practice, and to get the animals used to both the noise and the impact. The inert ones are, unfortunately, 'blank'- the fill and shell are clear, so as to not make a mess.
The eNmy version was in fact sold for a number of years- there was a mention of it before the Big Crash, and there's a couple on eBay right now if anyone would care to pick one up for gits and shiggles. No idea why they switched, though I suspect Toes is right- when the eNmy was discontinued, they lost access to those parts, and had to redesign. (I could see the original design being difficult for a farmer to clean and service, too, and it might be that the new one is more 'user friendly' in that respect.)
So... who wants to go in on a custom-encapsulated run of Mega-Marballizer?
A ball four times the weight at 295 FPS? You could start outranging even the Flatline users. 
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-Because it didn't exist when FS first came out. The people that developed this vet thing actually contacted me as a sort of informal consultant... probably about 12-14 years ago? I gave them a lot of ideas and pointed them towards other shops that had better manufacturing capacity than I did, and probably two or three years later, saw that grey gun appear on the market.Originally posted by SignOfZetaWhy the fudge did anyone waste time inventing first strike when this existed?
It's a larger caliber since they need a certain dose of the insecticide to treat the animal- the volume of a regular paintball isn't enough. And no field, pretty much anywhere, would allow one of these on the field, even if you had an actual paintball that fit it.
Keeping in mind that some countries- England specifically, as I recall- limit the power of an "air gun" to a certain amount of impact energy. A Vetgun-sized ball is about four times the weight, meaning you'd need a quarter the velocity to stay legal. To say nothing of goggle lenses being rated for normal paintballs, not ones four times heavier.
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There is a reason why all tournament rules specifically state .68.This makes .68 into the “sniper” class these 1.00” mofos having the ability to shoot through brush better…or bouncing less
Back about 30 years ago, Bob Long had Bullseye paint company secretly make him some larger paintballs. Maybe .80? I don't remember. But it was a huge advantage, since they ran at the same fps, it meant a longer range, less curves, etc. And this went on for a while in secret, until a money dispute came up, and Bullseye tried to release the paint to the public, which caused a huge scandal, and all tournaments and insurance rushed to standardize .68. This is part of the reason why .50 didn't take off. Because of Bob Long, .68 because hard-coded into lots of insurance policies and tournament rulebooks. SP worked hard to change that, but it just never really took off.
I think that Stingray lazerball gun was .80? to shoot those reusable paintballs?
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It was just .70
It was very undetectable and ran fine in most unmodified cockers at the time... Well other than barrel
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VintageRex has them at .80 cal (which is what I remember too). Its in the description, but the specs section shows .68 https://www.vintagerex.com/cgi-bin/i...=Brass%20Eagle
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That's wild. I'd never heard of this story.Originally posted by Hp_lovecraft View Post
There is a reason why all tournament rules specifically state .68.
Back about 30 years ago, Bob Long had Bullseye paint company secretly make him some larger paintballs. Maybe .80? I don't remember. But it was a huge advantage, since they ran at the same fps, it meant a longer range, less curves, etc. And this went on for a while in secret, until a money dispute came up, and Bullseye tried to release the paint to the public, which caused a huge scandal, and all tournaments and insurance rushed to standardize .68. This is part of the reason why .50 didn't take off. Because of Bob Long, .68 because hard-coded into lots of insurance policies and tournament rulebooks. SP worked hard to change that, but it just never really took off.
Can you recall what sort of specialized equipment was needed to shoot the specialized paint?
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