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Lancer X
03-28-2009, 08:23 PM
I have to pick up a mechanical gun since my woodsball team is playing in the Skills division of the UWL this summer (no electros allowed for the Ranger positions).

So, I've been trying to decide what kind of mech gun to get. I've been reading about 'Mags, and was considering a ULE-body Mag or Tac One.

This week though, I was in my local pball shop getting air and asked the owner whether he could order AGD guns. He gave me a real horror story about 'Mag maintenance and reliability. He said that they even charge an extra-high rate to work on Mags because they are a pain.

He talked about how complicated the AGD design is, and how there were so many different places they can leak from. He also mentioned he's never seen someone playing with a Mag in a tourney, and the owners are always tinkering with them instead of playing with them

So, how much of this do you folks think is on target? I'm not at all hesitant to tinker with guns (although I've only ever owned electros), and pride myself on maintaining and working on my own guns.

Are Mags really that much of a pain and a labor of love? I need something durable and robust that I can get tuned up and rely on for this tourney. Would I be better just buying a new Tippy 98 or something?

tweter
03-28-2009, 08:30 PM
LOL, all I can say is I play with a gun made from 1997 and can keep up with everyone else and its all mech. I know theres people on here that play with markers older than mine and do just fine. Maintenance is not that hard or bad to deal with. Just keep checking around about automags and i think youll find that its a top notch marker and you'd be very happy with one..... :headbang: :shooting:

Barsse
03-28-2009, 08:33 PM
Right... :spit_take That guy is probably on Smart Parts' payroll! Look no further than automags - the design is as simple as it gets, and on really really rare chance something does happen (busted o-ring) - you can pinpoint which o-ring to replace the next second, replace it in no time, and you're good to go. There are only 2 screws in automag - frame and valve. Doesn't get any simpler or robust than that. I may not be doing a great job explaining, but automags are :hail: , all hater threads are pure envy and jealousy.

You'll be a real :ninja: no matter what 'Mag you get. And trust me, you won't regret it.

cyberave68
03-28-2009, 08:34 PM
OK i say he is full of CRAP. I had an old mag that i didnt use for 3 years. Added a few drops or oil and away i went

Mags only have 3 orings. So i dont get the leaking issue. I will say i am alittle biased but its by using a mag since 92. Never have any real issuies and to fix them they are pretty easy. Plus in this forum you have the best group of guys here to help you out in any case.

Also you can learn to make a pnuemag that shoots as fast as an electro with being electro. I'd love to talk to the feild owner as i think he doesnt know what he's talkin about. Sure sometmes guns give you issues but you cant win em all. I have 5 mags myself and still only oil them before use and away i go. No real upkeep just oil and go...

Cy

xero28
03-28-2009, 08:37 PM
I would say almost none of that is true. Here's my story. I bought my mag back around '96. I played a few times a year with it until around '01. I never took it in to be serviced, ever. I think I only changed a few o-rings, and nothing I couldn't do myself. It sat in either my garage or closet until January of '08. Some friends wanted to start playing ball so I pulled my mag out. I changed one o-ring in it again and it worked fine. No leaks, great consistency, great gun. The guys at the store probably have never worked on a mag before and have no idea what they're doing, that's why they would charge so much, because they would have to learn how to tech them. I've never really worked on any other guns except cockers (which is another gun so many people have fears about), so I can't really compare the ease of teching a mag with anything else, but all I had to do was bone up on a few things here on AO and Custom Cockers and all of my questions about the mechanics of the guns and how to service them myself have been answered. If you want to get a VERY reliabale gun that has the capability of outshooting an electro, than look no further, get a mag. You will not be dissapointed.

Lancer X
03-28-2009, 08:42 PM
Thanks guys, and I welcome any more replies.

This pro shop I mentioned is located at a speedball field, and it's a very electro-centric kind of environment, so he may have his own agenda. That said, he knew the whole situation and knew I wasn't buying an electro from him no matter what.

So, just seemed weird for him to be so adamant w/ his advice if he wasn't sincere. No real advantage for him to snow me, and he wasn't really recommending a Tippmann either, which he does sell. After everything I'd read about Mags, he really threw me for a loop with what he said.

SkinnyHare
03-28-2009, 08:42 PM
lol, wow... where is this shop so i know to never go there.

just to give you an idea of how "troublesome" mags are... a few drops of oil, set the velocity, play all day.

i can't even remember how many of the things i own now and have yet to have issues with any of them. if you're getting something with a level 10 kit, it might be a pain to get it tuned right, but it's a one time thing. youtube has a couple decent vids on how to do it. if you get one, i think you'll be shocked at how trouble free they are and easy to maintain.

cyberave68
03-28-2009, 08:45 PM
Oh and i thought i should add that they are my loner guns as well. I dont worry about them getting all messed up or broken cause you cant really harm them. (Other than sticking the barrel 3ft in the dirt.) Heck on my mech's i just rinse them under the sink and oil em before they go bacxk in the box till next time....

I have an 06 timmy that i cant use when it colder than 50* outside. And it gives me troubles all the time. i can take my Etac (Emag) otu in the snow and it still shoots fine...

:dance: :mad: :cuss: :( :p
(Sorry about the smilies my little monster wanted me to put them there and she daddy's little girl so what ever she wants...)

sdawg
03-28-2009, 08:55 PM
Go watch the training videos on YouTube. What other paintgun maker provided an hour-long instructional video explaining how their gun works and how to troubleshoot it?

secretweaponevan
03-28-2009, 08:55 PM
Here is how easy a mag is to tech:

If it leaks out the barrel with the trigger at rest, replace the powertube o-ring.
If it leaks out the barrel with the trigger held, replace the on/off top teflon o-ring.
If it leaks out the back and turning the velocity down doesn't stop it, replace the regulator seat.

That is 98% of mag leaks right there. 3 seconds to diagnose. 1 minute to fix.

Most reliable mech marker I've ever used. Just oil and go.

p8ntbal4me
03-28-2009, 09:13 PM
Im not going to harp on the question,.. its pretty much the core question asked by new guys to mags.

But that guy that told you mags are probmatic,... well he probley cant work on mags to begin with. Im the ONLY guy at my field that can completely tech a mag when Im there to play because I bring:

Oil
O-rings (1 repair kit is all you need)
Knowledge of the parts where the o-rings go

AGD has blown up diagrams which simple graphics that tell you where everything in the valve goes.

You can remove the valve FASTER than you can take out a bolt assembly in less than 20 seconds without tools.

What everyone else is saying about the oil and o-rings is not a glorified mag owners myth,.. its the raw truth.

If you want a light mag,... get a nice frame you like,.. get a R/T length rail that has been ULE milled on the inside, get an X-Valve with a ULT installed, and get a ULE main body.

That will be as light as you need it to be and get you what your after.

If you want lighter trigger pull/faster trigger pulls,.. pneumag the frame as Cyberave68 suggested. (check the UWL rules before though because Ive been debating this topic on the forum for over a month now)

~ P8nt

maniacmechanic
03-28-2009, 09:24 PM
I have to pick up a mechanical gun since my woodsball team is playing in the Skills division of the UWL this summer (no electros allowed for the Ranger positions).

So, I've been trying to decide what kind of mech gun to get. I've been reading about 'Mags, and was considering a ULE-body Mag or Tac One.

This week though, I was in my local pball shop getting air and asked the owner whether he could order AGD guns. He gave me a real horror story about 'Mag maintenance and reliability. He said that they even charge an extra-high rate to work on Mags because they are a pain.

He talked about how complicated the AGD design is, and how there were so many different places they can leak from. He also mentioned he's never seen someone playing with a Mag in a tourney, and the owners are always tinkering with them instead of playing with them

So, how much of this do you folks think is on target? I'm not at all hesitant to tinker with guns (although I've only ever owned electros), and pride myself on maintaining and working on my own guns.

Are Mags really that much of a pain and a labor of love? I need something durable and robust that I can get tuned up and rely on for this tourney. Would I be better just buying a new Tippy 98 or something?


:rofl: :rofl: :clap: :clap:
Hey he's right , stay away from Mags you , will RARLY have to WORK on your marker , but you will spend a lot on THEM :cheers:

stoffa15
03-28-2009, 10:15 PM
You know what I have heard pro shop guys talk there trash about the Mag time and time again. "why spend that money on an X valve when you can just by a new gun"? "These guns are so outdated".In the time that I've had my Mag I have sent my invert mini back twice,my 98 custom pro back once and completely broke my A-5. If ANYTHING does go wrong with your marker you'll need these things.

1 full tank of air
2 allen wrench
3 gun oil
4 spareparts kit
5 computer
6 beers


can you do this with any other marker????

chafnerjr
03-28-2009, 10:25 PM
I hope that everyone here has managed to persuade you by now. Now some of us do tend to tinker with our markers, but it's not because of any reliability issue! It's just hard not to totally customize and configure your marker in any way you want.

You can always buy a Tac-One right from AGD and have a fantastic marker. I'd certainly get the ULT trigger kit if you go that route. Otherwise or you can build or buy a pneumag if allowed (*see p8ntbal4me's post). Search through this site. You will find some of the wildest and weirdest Mechs ever created. While your on youtube search "pneumag", there are some fun videos on there as well. :cheers:

:cheers:

Lancer X
03-28-2009, 11:19 PM
I hope that everyone here has managed to persuade you by now. Now some of us do tend to tinker with our markers, but it's not because of any reliability issue! It's just hard not to totally customize and configure your marker in any way you want.

You can always buy a Tac-One right from AGD and have a fantastic marker. I'd certainly get the ULT trigger kit if you go that route. Otherwise or you can build or buy a pneumag if allowed (*see p8ntbal4me's post). Search through this site. You will find some of the wildest and weirdest Mechs ever created. While your on youtube search "pneumag", there are some fun videos on there as well. :cheers:

:cheers:

Thanks again, guys!!

I'm actually not looking for a fast gun. My G3 is as fast as I want it to be. :) I'm really just looking for a very solid gun. If I have to buy a mech, I want a good one and a reliable one.

From what I'd read, the Automag sounded like it fit the bill and I really liked the long legacy of the gun. I've been playing occasionally for a long time (say '87 or so?), but only recently bought my own stuff and started really playing regularly. My point is, I remember the days of "holy crap - that guys has an Automag!" and what it was like to play against them as a pump-rental walk-on. Thought it would be cool to own one. :cool:

My biggest decision now is whether to buy a new RT Pro ULE or Tac One, or get an older Mag and put it together a little at a time. The used RT Pro ULE and Tac Ones seem to go for almost as much as the new ones though... :tard:

Beemer
03-28-2009, 11:45 PM
The used RT Pro ULE and Tac Ones seem to go for almost as much as the new ones though... :tard:

Wonder why that is? Must be cause they suck. ;)

psychowarden
03-29-2009, 12:23 AM
I'm surprised nobody else posted up this video.

http://www.zakvetter.com/paintball_videos/automag_stress_test.mov

skyless
03-29-2009, 12:26 AM
The first mag i owned was built from the scratch. It had an x valve and ult. It took a bit of reading befor i got it tuned nicely, I think i went though a few tanks of air just trying to get it to be how i thought i wanted it to be. After playing a couple games and tweeking the lvl 10 and the ult, I was good to go, NO PROBLEMS at all. This forum will teach you everythink you need to know about how to get you mag rocking.
There are alot of parts to choose from and some are compatable some are not. I would recommend buying a compleate marker and then upgrade and change it around after playing with it and watching the b/s/t to see whats available. I would highly recommend looking at the pic thread at the top of the paintball talk section to see what others have done. The customizatin is endless, its easy to get lost in all the different parts. Good luck. Carfull what you get your self into. It easy to get hooked.

PumpMag
03-29-2009, 01:25 AM
Mech mags are easy to fix. Just stock up on parts kits and service it yourself.

Of all the years I've shot mags both rec and tourney, I've never had to send any in. :headbang:

Now that's reliablity! :shooting:

VFX_Fenix
03-29-2009, 04:14 AM
For a point of reference.

I pulled one of my E-Mags out of storage (4 years) the other day, charged the battery, and gassed it up. The thing couldn't even complete a firing cycle with a HUGE leak down the barrel. I degassed the gun and pulled the X-Valve out. Tore it down, cleaned it, and had it back together in 5 minutes with the thing shooting like a champ after that.

The biggest complication with the Mag is that it's based on an integrated regulator. If you know how to service a reg, you know how to service a 'Mag.

The only other mech gun I'd toss in with a Mag is the "old faithful" Autococker. I have a '99 AC that I also pulled out of storage at about the same time. With a little tweaking and oil that was up and shooting like a champ also in a little over 15 minutes after a four year stint in storage.

The only AGD product I've ever had a problem with was a used AGD FLatline 4500PSI system which started chewing up Piston O-Rings. One of these days I'll send it in to AGD or Tuna to have a once over.

chafnerjr
03-29-2009, 10:03 AM
I would highly recommend looking at the pic thread at the top of the paintball talk section to see what others have done.

Jut start from the last page and move backwards... this is an old forum and the first 30+ pages contain nothing but broken links. (mine is at the bottom of page 80, but my wifes isn't on there yet). :cheers:

Xceolite
03-29-2009, 01:04 PM
After I bought my first mag, I sold everything. I now own four mags.

Just buy one and you will see.

GoatBoy
03-29-2009, 05:05 PM
The question I have to ask is: why are you relying on the second hand information from some flunky working at a paintball shop?

All the technical diagrams for everything are available online. You should be perfectly capable of just looking at the design and operation and figuring all of this out for yourself.





I have to pick up a mechanical gun since my woodsball team is playing in the Skills division of the UWL this summer (no electros allowed for the Ranger positions).

So, I've been trying to decide what kind of mech gun to get. I've been reading about 'Mags, and was considering a ULE-body Mag or Tac One.

This week though, I was in my local pball shop getting air and asked the owner whether he could order AGD guns. He gave me a real horror story about 'Mag maintenance and reliability. He said that they even charge an extra-high rate to work on Mags because they are a pain.

He talked about how complicated the AGD design is, and how there were so many different places they can leak from. He also mentioned he's never seen someone playing with a Mag in a tourney, and the owners are always tinkering with them instead of playing with them

So, how much of this do you folks think is on target? I'm not at all hesitant to tinker with guns (although I've only ever owned electros), and pride myself on maintaining and working on my own guns.

Are Mags really that much of a pain and a labor of love? I need something durable and robust that I can get tuned up and rely on for this tourney. Would I be better just buying a new Tippy 98 or something?

XM15
03-29-2009, 05:57 PM
It sounds like all the guy knows is the Automag myths. The reality is they are easy to tech and they are very reliable. I have played with a mag for almost 15 years and I can honestly say it has never let me down. I just played a 3 man tourny today with it and had no problems.

p8ntbal4me
03-29-2009, 06:56 PM
Any paintball gun can be easy to maintain,.. but with a Mag,.. its just to simple.

If you screw up oil and o-rings,.. you really have no place playing paintball to begin with.

I see alot of the younger "kids" always talking up some NXT Shocker like it was the lowest maintenance thing ever made.

I own 2 NXT Shockers, 3 SFT Shockers,.. and I can honestly say that they are WAAAAAAY more involved to maintain than these other techs make them out to be.

Taking apart the Shocker Firing can and bolt assembly alone is more maintenance than you have with ALL the Mag parts COMBINED!

I tech all my own guns,.. I have well over 25 of them. All ranging from SFT/NXT Shockers, Angel LED/LCD/IR3/Speed, WGP 96-2K3 Cockers with and without electronics, AGD Classic/X-Valved Mags both mech and electronic, etc. The list is long enough for my knowledge and opinion to carry some weight in my words.

#1: Get a light mag and get some spare parts.
#2: Print out the blow up diagram for the valve system you are going to use.
#3: Night before you play, gas it up, and check everything. Replace o-rings
#4: Oil the marker the night before
#5: Day you go to use it, oil it again and chrono the marker.
#6: Play
#7: CLEAN you gun when you are done! (you should have some q-tips in your tech box/bag)
#8: Oil, shoot dry with air,.. put gun away.

Thats basically what I do and my mags have all the original valves in them they came with.

~ P8nt

GothicVash
03-30-2009, 12:24 AM
didnt read everyones response just the first couple so if this was already said sorry

mabey he got confuzed on automags-autocockers i know their is some myth about cockers being a pain to work on .... and i mainly shoot cockers i see no problem or hardness to work on a cocker tho the mico line/ 3 way hose is a pain to get on and off the barbs but other then that its preety straight forward i just got a mag for my first time and all i know is its reall old and needed a valve rebuild so i watched some video riped it apart and rebuilt it its got a bunch of orings but other then that it seams preety simple and straight forward dosent seam complicated at all and ive heard nothing but great things about them

malJohann
03-30-2009, 02:50 AM
I bought a Tac-One that had 3 owners before me without worrying about it. This is my first Automag and since I've had it there has been no problems at all. I decided I wanted a 'mag after extensive research on the internet, because I wanted the most reliable mech, easy to tech and easy to clean paintball marker out there. On any given day for that criteria Automags > All.

I have no experience of E or X-mags, but take the advice on this forum as fact. Mag owners don't hype up their markers as something its not, because they don't need to. For me an Automag is the best platform ever built for making a marker exactly the way you want it, and then for that ownership experience to be as trouble free and rewarding as any you will ever find. No BS.

DevilMan
03-30-2009, 03:12 AM
bwahahhahahaaa..... I have to say.... Stay away from Mags...

bwhahahahhaaa......

Sorry I've been having these convo's all day. It must be opposite day or something....

ahhhh.....

Tomorrow it will all change back to normal.

DM

chinstrap
03-30-2009, 08:24 AM
Man...I bought a brand-spankin' new Tac One straight from AGD a few years ago and it's been a pain ever since.

After I put the first case through it, I had to read some stuff to get the bolt to stop leaking.

I've had to spray it down in my sink and shoot oil through it after every day of use.

I was thinking about getting one of them newfangled electromabobbers 'cuz someone at the shop told me they wash and lube themselves.

I hate maintenance.

punkncat
03-30-2009, 10:56 AM
Pain to work on...well I suppose it is from a point of view.

A classic mag valve with level 7 and all the correct parts (right powertube spacer) is arguably the toughest valve on the planet. Coupled with one of the SS bodies it is a markers that rarely needs anything aside from a few drops of oil. On the occasional decade, you have to replace the spring stack in the reg......

Now, to be honest, and rather "un" mag fanboi.....

Lvl 10 and ULT CAN be a pain in the butt. Especially if you are not used to them, or a mag in general. The problem is only worse and truly is a headache if both of them are out of adjustment and needing attention. In that case it requires that (for ease) that you have a few extra parts that lots of people generally do not have around, like the spacers for the LX, the shims for the ULT...in some cases the stock RT on/off to eliminate issues while tuning the lx...blah blah.
Both of those "add ons" require a bit of knowledge and honesty a bit of experience before just knowing what to do.

I honestly have always been pretty good with working on my own Mags in the past, but every one that has been brought to the shop for me to fix was very hit and miss at to whether I got it exactly right the first time. Pays to know your own marker, and not be afraid to tinker.

Once it is in adjustment, the ULT really never needs touching again. The LX, according to use and oil might need fiddling with a few times a year, if that, under normal circumstance.

So, pain in the butt? I could see it with certain types of mags. The comment from that store owner probably comes more from his inexperience and unfamiliarity with the Mag and a fear that he might not get it right. Not wholly untrue as others have said, but really has a lot to do with "where you stand" as it were.

Dend78
03-30-2009, 11:21 AM
:spit_take :rofl: bahahahaha i just read this first post holy crap, i must say mags and their two screws can be intimidating at first, then all three places i can think of a leak normally happening wow...

go with a mag there are tons of us here who can help you fix anything that goes wrong with it. no need to send it to a shop for an extra charge due to it being such a pain :rofl:

DevilMan
03-30-2009, 11:45 AM
Pain to work on...well I suppose it is from a point of view.

A classic mag valve with level 7 and all the correct parts (right powertube spacer) is arguably the toughest valve on the planet. Coupled with one of the SS bodies it is a markers that rarely needs anything aside from a few drops of oil. On the occasional decade, you have to replace the spring stack in the reg......

Now, to be honest, and rather "un" mag fanboi.....

Lvl 10 and ULT CAN be a pain in the butt. Especially if you are not used to them, or a mag in general. The problem is only worse and truly is a headache if both of them are out of adjustment and needing attention. In that case it requires that (for ease) that you have a few extra parts that lots of people generally do not have around, like the spacers for the LX, the shims for the ULT...in some cases the stock RT on/off to eliminate issues while tuning the lx...blah blah.
Both of those "add ons" require a bit of knowledge and honesty a bit of experience before just knowing what to do.

I honestly have always been pretty good with working on my own Mags in the past, but every one that has been brought to the shop for me to fix was very hit and miss at to whether I got it exactly right the first time. Pays to know your own marker, and not be afraid to tinker.

Once it is in adjustment, the ULT really never needs touching again. The LX, according to use and oil might need fiddling with a few times a year, if that, under normal circumstance.

So, pain in the butt? I could see it with certain types of mags. The comment from that store owner probably comes more from his inexperience and unfamiliarity with the Mag and a fear that he might not get it right. Not wholly untrue as others have said, but really has a lot to do with "where you stand" as it were.

I'm not saying you're wrong at all Punk.... The way I see it though is this... When you start "UltraFineTuning" the ULT and LX for top notch tongue in breech and sweet spot rapid fire or super light crisp performance you start getting to running a mag on the verge of leaking. When you do that then your tolerances are soooooo close that you run into issues if you aren't careful or even if you are after some wear in. Now if you know how to fix those issues it's no big deal. But it's something that you have to learn and the only way to learn it is to do it. Anymore if you run a quicker hopper on a Level 7 mag I don't see what could go wrong.

It's no different then when you start tweaking an Etek, DM, Mini or any other marker to run ULTRA LOW PRESSURE and still give you good efficiency and/or quiet operation. When you start getting into super tight areas then the margin that you have to keep the air pressure in tightens up with it.

My advice for the OP.... Pick up one of those Level 7 mags that are for sale right now for $100 over in the BST area. Put a tank on it and run it. If you think that mags are fickle or hard to work on or not reliable or crappy made then I'm pretty sure you can turn it around and sell it back off for the same that you paid.

Then you know first hand and not hearsay from all of us "fanbois" and disgruntled PB shop workers.

And any of you that have known me or have ever seen my gun bag know that there are far more than mags in it. And also know that out of all that I have in it more often then not a mag goes to the field when it's game time.

DM

Lancer X
03-30-2009, 05:03 PM
Thanks tons for all the replies!

The UWL owner finally made a ruling over the weekend due to my coaxing. Unfortunately, they are going to put all RT and X-Valve Mags in the same class as electros.

So, I think my plan it to shop for a classic AM/MM and stick a ULE body and LVL 10 bolt on it. Thanks again!

cyberave68
03-30-2009, 08:19 PM
Thanks tons for all the replies!

The UWL owner finally made a ruling over the weekend due to my coaxing. Unfortunately, they are going to put all RT and X-Valve Mags in the same class as electros.

So, I think my plan it to shop for a classic AM/MM and stick a ULE body and LVL 10 bolt on it. Thanks again!
Thats kinda funny? I can shoot my cocker as fast as my mag does that mean it wouldnt be allowed? Or was it a more biased on the fack that he doesnt like mags. hell i'll do you a favor. Send me your frame and i'll pneu it for you to work with a classic valve. It wont be RT or X-valve.... But it wont be illegal either....

Cy

DevilMan
03-30-2009, 08:25 PM
Thanks tons for all the replies!

The UWL owner finally made a ruling over the weekend due to my coaxing. Unfortunately, they are going to put all RT and X-Valve Mags in the same class as electros.

So, I think my plan it to shop for a classic AM/MM and stick a ULE body and LVL 10 bolt on it. Thanks again!


That's just stupid I think. But then it ain't my gig so whatever works for him.

Best of luck to ya... Oh and put a sleeper pnue frame on a classic mag and go play it off.... :D

Should be fun.

DM

trugz
03-30-2009, 08:32 PM
I am in no way shape or form to speak much about mags since I have only own mine for about a month. However I owned a couple of spyder, almost every tippmann ever made, a mini and several smarparts markers and I have to say, the automag is by far the most enjoyable marker to play with and the one that needs maintenance the least. I dont know what the guy at your paintball field was talking about but I told that to our paintball field owner who has been in the industry for around 17 years now and he almost felt of his chair laughing...lol! Get a mag and prove that sucker wrong.

Bagheera
03-30-2009, 09:29 PM
Thanks tons for all the replies!

The UWL owner finally made a ruling over the weekend due to my coaxing. Unfortunately, they are going to put all RT and X-Valve Mags in the same class as electros.

So, I think my plan it to shop for a classic AM/MM and stick a ULE body and LVL 10 bolt on it. Thanks again!


It sounds to me that in one breath he's telling you that Mags are utter crap and total junk, and in another breath, that they're a threat to everything on the field and these mech markers have to be put in the same category as electros. I love these hypocritical kool-aid drinking nutjobs.

Konigballer
03-31-2009, 09:34 AM
I would just say, to add to what others have already said, that AGD markers were designed and manufactured to function with very tight tolerances. This is not like a Tippmann whose design and manfacture is so bone simple, that it can function within very wide factory tolerances. It's like comparing a HK G3 assault rifle to an AK-47, they both function very reliably, but within VERY different design tolerances.

Especially when talking about the LV10 bolt, and RT & X valves, even the tiny differences in o-ring batches MIGHT require you to troubleshoot small leaks if your replacing old o-rings and what not. You might only have to dry fire your mag a couple hundred times to get all the o-rings seated and sealed properly, or you might only have to dry fire it twenty times, every valve is a little different. Once you learn the valve's design, you can usually easily isolate the source of the leak and then fix it. I think thats part of the fun with mags is learning how your mag's individual valve functions.

Also, because of tight design tolerances, if any of your mag's parts are out of factory specs for whatever reason, they will probably cause a problem and need to be replaced. Some used mags have had previous owners who thought they were marker techs simply because they owned a dremel tool... errant drilling, shaving, and God only knows what by the previous owner might not be immediatly apparent until you gas it up and find that it won't shoot right. Thats when you come on AO!

That being said, the design of the CLassic Valve in particular is VERY easy to troubleshoot and maintain. Here is a link to the old AGD maintanance video clips on YouTube. This came out well before the LV10 bolt, but it will help you totally understand how the classic valve works, and how to troubleshoot it:
http://forum.specialopspaintball.com/index.php?showtopic=153817

Here is a link to all the online owners manuals:
http://www.airgundesignsusa.com/manual.shtml

Dalm
03-31-2009, 07:57 PM
didnt read everyones response just the first couple so if this was already said sorry

mabey he got confuzed on automags-autocockers i know their is some myth about cockers being a pain to work on .... and i mainly shoot cockers i see no problem or hardness to work on a cocker tho the mico line/ 3 way hose is a pain to get on and off the barbs but other then that its preety straight forward i just got a mag for my first time and all i know is its reall old and needed a valve rebuild so i watched some video riped it apart and rebuilt it its got a bunch of orings but other then that it seams preety simple and straight forward dosent seam complicated at all and ive heard nothing but great things about them


In all honesty I was a cocker fanatic before I got turned onto mags. I've owned mech's E1's and my last cocker was an E2 Karni. There will always be a place in my heart for cockers and in my bag as well.
But I have to say my learning curve from my very first untimed cocker to being able to tech one out and fix timing on them without much trouble can't compare with the ease of the mag.

I have a first gen tac-one that I recently decided to pneu and I have to say it is just simply amazing. It feels like an electro..shoots like and electro but doesn't fry or drain batteries like an electro!
Thanks to Cyber, Luke and Tuna for the help on that btw. She's a beauty now and shoots unbelievably smooth.

cyberave68
03-31-2009, 09:24 PM
It sounds to me that in one breath he's telling you that Mags are utter crap and total junk, and in another breath, that they're a threat to everything on the field and these mech markers have to be put in the same category as electros. I love these hypocritical kool-aid drinking nutjobs.
Good call on that one...!!! :cheers:

chill will
04-02-2009, 10:09 PM
. No real upkeep just oil and go...

Cy


That says it all. I use to be into cockers, but that changed about 5 years ago. I got into a 15 minute stand off with a mag owner and was marked. We talked about our exchange and he schooled me on the mag. Like you, I was only hearing the bad about mags. Six mags later, because only a mag will allow you to change you gun every year at a fraction of the cost of buying a new one, I am still here.

In an ALL MECH play, you will be the big dog on the field, provided you can play and not spray. If you like to spray though get a pneu mag kit or xvalve with ult.

THEY WILL RESPECT YOU. :shooting:

Frizzle Fry
04-27-2009, 06:36 PM
As a mag lover, I have only these complaints:

- Parts are expensive, and generally MUST come from the internet. Most stores and fields have no RT/RTpro/Xvalve parts whatsoever, and only a limited supply of classic valve bits and pieces. That said, parts are rarely needed.

- Tuning a Level 10 bolt is really hard at first, and though it gets easier over time, you eat a lot of air. You eat a lot of air tech'ing any mag really; they're gashogs (beautiful beautiful gashogs). Again, you rarely need to tech them.

- Due to the modular nature, it's hard to find all-original classics... Parts get swapped so often that you might have the original setup but not the original parts. I don't know why exactly this is a bad thing, but my two or three mag whore friends (like myself) always complain.

- People at fields suck. Refs constantly yell about my mech X-valved single trigger Micromag being "set on full auto", or tell my my Pneumags are too fast, or even whine about my MicroEmag allegedly "ramping" when it doesn't have the software to do such, never mind the fact that the battery died an hour ago and it's in mechanical mode.



Buy a classic mag, get a nice TacOne body and a comfy frame, go from there. Mags are a love affair; if the guy at your local shop "always sees people fiddling with mags" it's likely because those people own 5 working Automags, and are building 5 more out of parts right there on the field.

pinkanese
04-27-2009, 10:18 PM
I must say after Saturday I am becoming a fanboi :). Bought my mag used. doubt the previous owner ever changed anything in it. I got it out put in a few drops of oil, crono'ed and went at it. Its a lvl7 but still I didn't have a single chop! Not even as much as a barrel break all day, makes me wonder if I really need to install the lvl 10 I have for it :).

Lancer X
04-28-2009, 11:14 AM
It sounds to me that in one breath he's telling you that Mags are utter crap and total junk, and in another breath, that they're a threat to everything on the field and these mech markers have to be put in the same category as electros. I love these hypocritical kool-aid drinking nutjobs.

These are two different people. The one guy is a local field owner - he's the one that said Mags are hard to take care of.

The other guys is the owner/organizer of the UWL. He's ruled that RT Mags are too fast and will be classified as Class C guns.


I must say after Saturday I am becoming a fanboi :). Bought my mag used. doubt the previous owner ever changed anything in it. I got it out put in a few drops of oil, crono'ed and went at it. Its a lvl7 but still I didn't have a single chop! Not even as much as a barrel break all day, makes me wonder if I really need to install the lvl 10 I have for it :).

Saturday was my first day of play with my ULE classic mag. So far, I REALLY like it. I, on the other hand, am getting some occasional breaks/chops with my lvl 7 bolt. (I'm using HPA, and a VLocity loader.)

That said, I wasn't using great paint (Diablo's XBall), although I had a decent paint-barrel fit (barrel kit). I am planning to order a high-pressure reg piston, and then I'll install the lvl 10 kit I already bought. I'm betting that will take care of any problems.

cyberave68
04-28-2009, 05:29 PM
Saturday was my first day of play with my ULE classic mag. So far, I REALLY like it. I, on the other hand, am getting some occasional breaks/chops with my lvl 7 bolt. (I'm using HPA, and a VLocity loader.)

That said, I wasn't using great paint (Diablo's XBall), although I had a decent paint-barrel fit (barrel kit). I am planning to order a high-pressure reg piston, and then I'll install the lvl 10 kit I already bought. I'm betting that will take care of any problems.
The breaks could be that you are short stroking the trigger. If your not giving it a full pull an return then that could be just you getting used to the feel of the trigg when trying to shoot fast. Unlike an electro where it is a switch and electronics fireing the marker, its how you pull and release the trig that needs a little adjusting. PM me when you get good with it an i will give you a trick to get a higher BPS.

Glad you like it so far... Question: how is it as far as messing with, fixing and all that jazz...???

Cy

Lancer X
05-01-2009, 09:37 AM
(duplicate post - ignore)

Lancer X
05-01-2009, 09:40 AM
The breaks could be that you are short stroking the trigger. If your not giving it a full pull an return then that could be just you getting used to the feel of the trigg when trying to shoot fast. Unlike an electro where it is a switch and electronics fireing the marker, its how you pull and release the trig that needs a little adjusting. PM me when you get good with it an i will give you a trick to get a higher BPS.

Glad you like it so far... Question: how is it as far as messing with, fixing and all that jazz...???

Cy

Hmm, yeah I just found out about the trigger needing a full-travel pull. Not sure I'm crazy about this fact. I mean, if you want to shoot accurately, jerking the trigger hard isn't the best technique...

Re. tearing down the gun and such - seems to be no problem. If you aren't a mechanically-inclined person, it might be more daunting, dunno. Everything I've had to do to it so far has been simple, and I've had it torn down a few times. I'll let you know what the lvl 10 tuning process is like after I've got it installed.

Spider-TW
05-01-2009, 11:44 AM
A loader can only stop chops if it has paint to push with. A level 7 will often give you a chop at the end of your loader since the only time you let it go empty is when you are too busy shooting. Level 10 bolts take some getting used to, but they definitely work.

the trigger doesn't need as much a full pull as a full release, so that the valve can recharge. Trigger stops help if your are a masher like some of us. :rolleyes:

chopper duke
05-01-2009, 01:34 PM
I've been playing for awhile now. I was a cocker guy through and through for years. Probably because when I first started playing on a regular basis, my best friend had a mag and we were ALWAYS competing with each other. He got a mag, I got a cocker.

I went from cocker to cocker and finally got into PPS brass. I had a 1K and a 2K Blazer and recently traded my 2K for a Pnuemag. When I got it was thinking it was gonna be a PITA to time if it somehow managed to get untimed (like most of my cockers were). Oh. My. God! This thing was so fast for a mech! I really liked it so I began looking for older mags. I came across an old "parts" mini mag I picked up for cheap because I was told it wouldn't shoot.

As soon as I got it, I pulled it apart and when I took the bolt off, something was stuck in it. A quick question on here and I was told to check the powertube tip. Sure enough, the tip had broken in half (I have no idea how, that's how I got it). I was able to remove the broken tip from inside the bolt. I had a spare tip I had picked up in a big gear bag trade. I put it on (spacer and everything else was still in the powertube) and oiled the valve assembly. Put it back in the gun and it shot like a champ. I had a working Mini Mag with matching valve numbers for $35 a powertube tip I already had and a few minutes of my time.

So yes, they are easy to tech. Watch the Tom Kaye videos on you tube. They're old, but I've learned a lot already. I'm sure from now on, I'll always have a mag, or three! :D

cyberave68
05-01-2009, 09:17 PM
There is a few way to fix the pull on the mag. First Air up the gun, and look at the sear arm and where it sits on the back of the trigg. Point the gun down and you should only see a small gap between the trig and the sear arm. If the gap is bigger than say the thickness of a razor blade then simply turn the pin till it comes out more. That is why it has threads and that brass piece. (its actually called a yolk... Not sure why?) Adjust it till it alomst hits the back of the trig and then get a trig stop set screw. Then all you need to do it adjust the stop till the gun wont shoot. back it off like quarter turn and that will take out all the excess travel and help with the choppin a bit....

Cy

Spider-TW
05-01-2009, 10:42 PM
(its actually called a yolk... Not sure why?)

It is a yoke. Like an oxen yoke, a rigid harness for control. :D

DevilMan
05-01-2009, 10:46 PM
It is a yoke. Like an oxen yoke, a rigid harness for control. :D

Well thank you Merriam!!!

:D

DM

cyberave68
05-02-2009, 01:04 AM
It is a yoke. Like an oxen yoke, a rigid harness for control. :D
:p :p :p :p :p :p

blackdeath
05-03-2009, 04:04 PM
Find this shop mans opinion quite funny.

I played paintball for the first time in 7 years yesterday. The only thing that I did to my 0ld 97 model rt to get it ready was put oil in it. I didnt clean anything. Should have. But I didnt. My only problem was a little bolt stick. Ill get that fixed and all will be well. And the stick wasnt bad enough to make it whare I couldnt use the gun. It was just anoying. I never have had any problems with an automag unless using co2 as the air suply. The first mag I had was baught in 96 and I played with them till 02 when I had quit playing. So you shouldn have any issues with them. Just take care and have fun with it.

Hotshot33610
05-03-2009, 08:46 PM
I can kinda see things from the field owner's point of view, having had trouble with mags I've purchased myself.

To me, mags just arn't quite as easy to figure out as cockers are. Everything is nicely contained within the valve, out of sight, while with a cocker you can just look at it and see how it works.

Without the internet and the knowledge of others, I really don't think I would have ever been able to diagnose the problems I've had.

Lancer X
05-05-2009, 10:24 AM
There is a few way to fix the pull on the mag. First Air up the gun, and look at the sear arm and where it sits on the back of the trigg. Point the gun down and you should only see a small gap between the trig and the sear arm. If the gap is bigger than say the thickness of a razor blade then simply turn the pin till it comes out more. That is why it has threads and that brass piece. (its actually called a yolk... Not sure why?) Adjust it till it alomst hits the back of the trig and then get a trig stop set screw. Then all you need to do it adjust the stop till the gun wont shoot. back it off like quarter turn and that will take out all the excess travel and help with the choppin a bit....

Cy

Awesome - thanks Cy!

Can you explain more about this trigger stop set screw? Does it go through the trigger, like on most modern electros? Or come out of the grip frame behind the trigger? (I have the classic AGD CF single-trigger grip frame. Will I have to drill and tap a hole for the screw??)

FYI, my high-pressure valve piston is arriving today, and so I'll be installing my lvl 10 bolt over the next few days. This should also help with the chops.

cfos00
05-05-2009, 03:58 PM
The level X should take care of the chopping. I had a problem with that when I went to my first mag about 10 years ago from a Nova (built the RT from a Retro Valve and went from there). The level X is a godsend, and getting used to the trigger will/would have helped a ton with chopping too.

I shoot a mag, cocker, angel, and ePGP, and in my opinion the learning curve on the mag is about the easiest of any gun I've ever had. Putting the Level X and pneu-ing the frame are the biggest adjustments my gun has had in a decade, and it took twenty minutes to get both up and running. They're also about as bulletproof as they come. My mag has broken down...once...in ten years...because of one worn out o-ring..and I am by no means special in that right. You made good calls with what you bought and what you've put on it, and should be able to spend as much time as you want on the field and not on the sideline fixing your gun. I'm amazed a field owner would ever have given you that opinion on a mag.

a.w.e.s.o.m-o
05-06-2009, 11:40 AM
I bought my first AGD gun in 1991, it was the minimag, I used it till the rt classic was released and have used the classic ever since, it performs flawlessly. Three weeks ago a friend want to try paintball out for the first time. I said waste money on a crappy rental I have a gun you can borrow in storage. That minimag had been sitting in a box in stored away for over ten years.
I pulled it out, didn't take it apart just poured oil into it, gas it up, handed it him and said good luck. The gun played all day with out a single problem, no leaks, no sticking bolt nothin. what other non AGD product can do that.

KC
05-06-2009, 05:40 PM
lol. I dont even clean them anymore. Just wipe clean with a rag and oil before use.

I built a few Emags for friends that play maybe once a month... I dont know as they even oil theres!