dougs
10-17-2001, 04:30 PM
I'm eagerly awaiting my Automag upgraded to an EMag to be sent back to me. While waiting i've gone down to my local paintball store and checked out the emag's they have on the wall and am wondering how people have their air lines attached.
My old Automag had steel hoses going to the expansion chamber in front of the trigger and then a bottom line to the bottom of the grip in which I could either screw in the bottle or go remote.
With the new Emag, the battery pack is in the place of the expansion chamber. So, my question is how do people have their air lines set up? I don't really want to have a steel hose sticking out the side of the gun and looping around. This will mess up the lines of the gun, ruining the aesthetics of it. Plus I don't want to risk getting an air line caught in some branch as I tend to play in woodsy fields and crawl around a bunch.
I'm also planning on keeping with my remote air and don't want to have a drop forward on my marker. Any negative aspects to this method?
Anyone have any pics of what they have done? I'm thinking of solid steel lines but this will cost some $$.
thanks
ds
My old Automag had steel hoses going to the expansion chamber in front of the trigger and then a bottom line to the bottom of the grip in which I could either screw in the bottle or go remote.
With the new Emag, the battery pack is in the place of the expansion chamber. So, my question is how do people have their air lines set up? I don't really want to have a steel hose sticking out the side of the gun and looping around. This will mess up the lines of the gun, ruining the aesthetics of it. Plus I don't want to risk getting an air line caught in some branch as I tend to play in woodsy fields and crawl around a bunch.
I'm also planning on keeping with my remote air and don't want to have a drop forward on my marker. Any negative aspects to this method?
Anyone have any pics of what they have done? I'm thinking of solid steel lines but this will cost some $$.
thanks
ds