Anyone else super skeptical of this thing? I'm curious to see the internals because the only ideas i have is something similar to slingshots, the airowgun, and the slug's caliburn for nerf. All of those are either huge or impractical to make electrically driven.
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For outlaw as kids, not having to deal with air fills would be awesome. I remember charging airsoft packs at home was easy, but getting a CO2 fill was a 25 minute one way drive - not my parents' favorite.
I'd expect a small compressor filling a reservoir, not a sector gear slinging a piston. A large reservoir at 35psi (like a tire) would be plenty, so we know the tech exists.Feedback
www.PhrameworkDesigns.com < Nelspot, Sterling, and Phantom parts, plus the occasional big project.
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I'm more interested in the hopper!My Old Feedback (300+) https://web.archive.org/web/20180112...-feedback.html
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Maybe I'm imagining this, but I seem to remember a battery powered paintball marker from the mid-late 2000s that had a sort of dual wheel pitching machine style system in it. It had two soft-ish wheels that would fling the paintball instead of being air driven. I swear there was a video of it, or maybe just mock-ups...I don't know.
Anyone else remember that?
Anyway, I just don't see how this will improve the industry in any way. As a source of innovation it is great, but I think the tech would need to come a long way for this to be practical for anyone that plays on a serious level.
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You're either thinking Hotwheels or Nerf. I don't think there were ever any paintball guns with flywheels.Originally posted by SteelJester View PostMaybe I'm imagining this, but I seem to remember a battery powered paintball marker from the mid-late 2000s that had a sort of dual wheel pitching machine style system in it. It had two soft-ish wheels that would fling the paintball instead of being air driven. I swear there was a video of it, or maybe just mock-ups...I don't know.
Anyone else remember that?
Anyway, I just don't see how this will improve the industry in any way. As a source of innovation it is great, but I think the tech would need to come a long way for this to be practical for anyone that plays on a serious level.
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Precisely this. Getting tanks filled can be a hassle when you're young, or when you live far away from a field or shop. Getting rid of the tank would be a huge stepchange in paintball technology. If they can pull it off, I think it would be the biggest thing since the original shocker.Originally posted by flyweightnate View PostFor outlaw as kids, not having to deal with air fills would be awesome. I remember charging airsoft packs at home was easy, but getting a CO2 fill was a 25 minute one way drive - not my parents' favorite.
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There was this thing. Not sure how it worked, though.Originally posted by SteelJester View PostMaybe I'm imagining this, but I seem to remember a battery powered paintball marker from the mid-late 2000s that had a sort of dual wheel pitching machine style system in it. It had two soft-ish wheels that would fling the paintball instead of being air driven. I swear there was a video of it, or maybe just mock-ups...I don't know.
Anyone else remember that?
Anyway, I just don't see how this will improve the industry in any way. As a source of innovation it is great, but I think the tech would need to come a long way for this to be practical for anyone that plays on a serious level.
https://madpaintballer.com/nps_evolt.php
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The E-volt wasn't flywheel driven, though. The motor pulled back a piston against spring tension and then released it, the piston slamming forward and generating a blast of pressurized air. ZDSPB.com has an animation of how the mechanism worked, at least conceptually.
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Gino was NPS and now Valken but KEE kept all of NPS's IP including the E-volt AFAIK. So GI/Kore now owns that.
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MrBarraclough, thanks for that. I was unsure how it actually worked.
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Ditto. Paintball is incredibly location dependent. If you aren't near a field, getting air fills is a huge pain. If I didn't live 10 minutes away from a scuba shop where I can get a big tank filled for $10, I'm not sure I would still be playing. The nearest field to me is over an hour away. If I played at all, I would probably only go once or twice a year. So if there was a product that can shoot paintballs without having to go for air fills, that widens the market considerably.Originally posted by Magmoormaster View PostOriginally posted by flyweightnateFor outlaw as kids, not having to deal with air fills would be awesome. I remember charging airsoft packs at home was easy, but getting a CO2 fill was a 25 minute one way drive - not my parents' favorite.
Precisely this. Getting tanks filled can be a hassle when you're young, or when you live far away from a field or shop. Getting rid of the tank would be a huge stepchange in paintball technology.
Not saying I would get one, personally. But I can see why Valken would invest in something like this.View my feedback or read about my Virginia woodsball club.
Let me make you something. I build pneumags, auto-response frames, and wooden pill cases.
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