Views from a paintball cynic

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Armchair Airsmithing

If you've ever seen my videos, you know that I'm a fairly basic kind of player. I have a paintgun, it works, I'm happy. I don't tinker with a perfectly fine working paintgun, I see no reason to. It's working the way I want it to work, why should I throw more random crap in there?

But you know what gets me? Players who think they're qualified airsmiths telling me what I need to do to my paintguns to make them "awesomer." I don't understand when it became everyone else's job to tell me what I need to add to my perfectly fine working paintgun to make it finer. Unless the digital-camo vest I've been wearing lately has a subliminal message in the pattern that says "Please tell me what to do with my gun because I'm clueless!" I'm willing to say that's a possibility.

Last year is a good example. I played stock-class at CCP. (oh sorry, Chicagoland Paintball.) After the night was basically over, the referee came over to me with the "best idea evah". His idea? Get a PVC extension off the back of the stock class feed, and put a hopper on it. "So you won't have to reload so much!" Then I could take the 12 gram adapter and rig it for a nitrogen bottle.

I went into the hard case, and pulled out the direct feed body that I keep in there. His jaw hit the floor, and he couldn't believe that I wouldn't put it on the gun. I wanted to play stock class that night. Big deal. But there was a tech problem I showed him the feed was wobbly, and I didn't trust it. "Well, just JB weld it!"

There's something called aesthetics. Learn it. Oh, wait, this is the same type of player who wears a red jersey with yellow goggles and an "agg" retro goggle band that's stretched out beyond safe. Right.

But more recently I posted a project I was working on over on the Spec Ops forum. And one of the reply posts was "suggestions" of what I need to do with the gun. It included adding an intelligrip, dremmeling out the revvy I had on it for the warp feed, and get "just a freak back" to make the barrel shorter.

Here's the thing. I appreciate the feedback, but all of the above suggestions don't solve any of the problems I'm having with the paintgun. The only problem I have are aesthetics. I want to make it look cleaner and the feed hose is the only thing in the way of that. It's a project in progress, as are all projects like this. So adding an electronic grip and wiring it into the warp and revvy don't solve the problems. It just adds more things that can go wrong.

It's not just me. When I go to fields, I hear people complain a lot about their "POS" gun and how they want to make it better. Then another person starts to expound on how "you NEED to get this board" and "You gotta have this barrel" and my favorite "you have to add a low pressure system to it." Once, just for fun, I asked a kid why he needed low pressure on his gun. He stalled, looked at the ground, and finally said "I dunno, it's cool I think."

A long time ago I asked Doc for help with an article, and he put it best. To paraphrase, he said that a lot of people will just throw parts onto a paintgun without thinking if they're meant to go together. They do this because they buy the "cool part of the month" that everyone else has, and they want to be cool too. It doesn't make sense to use a high pressure output HPA system then run it through "low pressure" regs. When I play today, I look around and see this mentality is alive and well. I also see that everyone seems to know what parts you need to make "your gun better" regardless if they even own the same kind of paintgun as you do.

For the most part, the advice falls to customer loyalty or what's fashionable this month. It really has nothing to do with what you need as much as someone else selling you on a product they're loyal to. When a guy wearing a DYE jersey, DYE pants, DYE shoes with matching socks and a limited edition DM7 marker tells me "You know what your gun needs? You need an Ultralight! TOTALLY make you a better player!" No, you need to stop being a fanboy. If you're so insecure in your product loyalty that you feel that you need to pressure other people into buying your "brand name" too, go bother someone else.

Call me a purist, but if something is working, and it's working perfectly for what I use it for, why should I change it? Why do I need a "name brand part" to fix a non-existent problem on my paintgun? Oh, right, because if it says "DYE" it shoots 3 BPS faster, right? Just like chrome adds 5% accuracy and the right colors make it shoot harder.

For that matter, why do I need to add electronics to a non-electro paintgun? If it's mechanically sound and it meets my needs, what do I gain by adding electronics? Extra cost when I replace batteries, right. "But it shoots faster!" No, it shoots 285 FPS if I have it adjusted right. Oh, you meant volume shooting, well as often as I've needed a gun to shoot 15 times a second I can't justify the cost to benefit ratio.

I watched my old FPS videos, I've only shot my e-mag at 15 bps ONCE. EMR's castle, raking the trigger when the attackers reinserted and I was adding to the suppression fire. That's all. So why should I spend $100 for an electronics package that I'll only use, on average, once a year? Seems to me my money is better spent on other things, like PSP games or pizza.

To be honest, I can see where the paintguns I own could use improvement. But mostly it's things that I can fix with a simple add-on. My current paintguns, the A-5A2 and the Longbow / Shortbow need to be a little more air efficient. I'm planning on buying a spring kit for the A-5, and possibly a different bolt to help that. The 'Bow needs to be broken in, as I haven't shot more than 2000 balls from it in the year I've owned it. Once it's broken in, it'll settle down and I can adjust from there.

Well that and the "blade" trigger, I'd like to swap that out for a nice 2-finger grooved one, but I digress.

My point is that because you put a part on your gun and somehow it's still running that doesn't mean that you're qualified to tell people what will and won't work on their particular setup. It also doesn’t mean that you have to sell other people on "your brand". Fine, you spent $200 on a barrel, $1500 on a gun, and $300 on clothing. That does not mean I need to as well so you can feel better about yourself.

If someone asks you "Hey, hows that Stiffi working for you?" that's another story. They see you have one, you're using it, and they want to know. If someone asks you "Hey, have you had problems with the air efficiency with that gun?" then feel free to brag about what you did to get 10 more shots from your 4500 tank. But personally, I find it rude (if not a little insulting) to approach someone and tell them "Your gun sucks, but I know what you can do to make it better!"

Unless you're a paid representative, it's not your job to sell me parts from your favorite company. It's also not my job to justify your wasting money on things that you really don't need to play paintball. I admit I'm not the most technically inclined, but by the same token don't make a backhanded insult by telling me my gear sucks because it's not like what you have on your setup.

Normally, what I use works flawlessly. Dumb things happen, but for the most part what I got works. There's a reason for that. It's not just the quality of the manufacture, but mostly because I don't tink with it. I don't add "mod of the month" to my gear. When it works, I stick with it. When something wears down, I replace it.

But please, don't tell me I have to put parts on parts in parts to make a perfectly working paintgun play better. 90% of the time, the gun isn't at fault for poor performance. It's the nut behind the trigger.

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10 Comments:

  • I've run into a similar problem, comming from a friend. Back when I first looked to getting my marker, we were chatting away, and he told me that I should definitely get an Expansion Chamber and a 20 inch barrel and all sorts of goodies. His list would have tripled the cost of it! And I somehow doubt it would have improved my game anyway (Especially since the stock barrel fits the FREE field paint perfectly) And I haven't really noticed much of the mythical CO2 freezing me gun down. And the single trigger works just fine.

    Oh, I sometimes get told I need a better gun too, Which isn't a problem. I just wish people would let me find things out myself rather than stating "Thats a Blowback, it wont be accurate at all" which is oten followed by "Dont bother wasting more money on that! Save up for a better gun!"

    I need to learn this for myself! Not be handed lessons on a platter! I think thats why I like WDR...its more of a "This might help you" approach rather than a "Copy my uber moves or else you fail!"

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Wednesday, December 27, 2006 8:34:00 PM  

  • The part that gets me is when people really dont know what the mod they happen to be buying for their gun does or how to use it correctly. It sounds stupid, but it does happen.

    I'm a decent player, I play whenever I can, and I've put a fair amount of money into my hobby. I'm confident in my abilities with a paintball marker and am pretty good with cover and concealment. My setup I have is perfect for how I play, and the only mods I buy anymore are purely for looks, I dont need anything else.
    Mods and namebrand crap dont make you a good player. Playing does.

    Keep on writing Tyger, some of at least are listening!

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Wednesday, December 27, 2006 10:57:00 PM  

  • STOP CALLING IT A PAINTGUN!!! ITS A MARKER!!!

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Thursday, December 28, 2006 4:26:00 PM  

  • So what should we call a "nail gun"? a "confetti gun"? or even a "glue gun"?

    There's a point where you get overly PC.

    By Blogger Rob "Tyger" Rubin, at Thursday, December 28, 2006 4:32:00 PM  

  • What if I call it a, gasp, paintball gun? Spam over...

    Again Tyger, I agree, mostly. I've had similar experiences, mostly regarding the qloader I used to own, and I've been frustrated by them. However, if I see someone having difficulties, I'm going to try to help them, and if I know what the problem is, I will suggest the most reasonable/cost-efficient course of action.

    Quick question: Can I get a link to that SpecOps thread you were referring to? I was on vacation, and must have missed it.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Sunday, December 31, 2006 1:56:00 AM  

  • Cool blog there Tyger. So glad I don't get bombarded with crap like that. I'm actually gonna do a blog similar to this for my own website, except the format is 'know-it-all-isms on paintball forums'. Taking a stab at the kids who bring the armchair airsmithing online, rather than in person.

    BTW, we're still waiting for the woodsball stereotypes blog :)

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Thursday, January 11, 2007 2:23:00 PM  

  • Hey Tyger,

    We finally meet ( brief moment at EMR last year) , anyway I agree with the amount of people that try to sell their brand to others and to tell you the truth is rampant online, specially at forums.
    It goes from clothes to who makes the best barrel.Even if the manufacturer does not make a barrel to your gun these people have contact information
    for you to call and ask IF they can make one for you...ridiculous.
    Keep on writing....Tobrak

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Sunday, February 04, 2007 1:19:00 PM  

  • I try to be practical, and only suggest things to people if it will REALLY help them or I see they're having an actual problem. Let's face it: certain poorly made guns don't work very well until you do something to them. I'm not going to tell anyone to mess with a perfectly good working paintgun.

    I'm also not going to waste my own money on parts I don't need. I ran into a reactivity problem with my Classic Mag valve (it works perfectly, just not as well as I want it to). Instead of spending a massive amount of money on a new X-Valve, I sourced a used ReTro valve. Problem fixed, for 1/3 of the cost.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Tuesday, March 20, 2007 5:24:00 PM  

  • i would like to say that i really dont think those mods and upgrades are bad, they make your gun a little better and it is fun to buy new things for your gun, but i totally agree if people are bugging you about why your gun should have this or that, or you shouldnt even have it. What im trying to say is if you want to have 4,000$ worth of mods go ahead, but dont bother me about my gun.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at Saturday, April 21, 2007 3:05:00 PM  

  • well the only coments I get on my gear usualy is "WTF is that??" Then again all my gear is more then 1 year old and doesn't have an electric trigger so... no one has any ideas about it or what would make it better... although you can't mention hammerhead online without being told you are a tool for using it and you would be much better off with anything else because spinning paintballs doesn't work... I don't care why it works I just like it. Oh and I've come to the conclusion that one can't may warp feed hose look good without lots of work and a few pounds of steel to hide the entire thing in. good luck though.

    By Blogger Unknown, at Monday, April 30, 2007 2:18:00 AM  

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