I just received a case of Big Ball from the UPS delivery man, and the first thing I did was open it up to perform the drop test on it.
I had a terrible weekend with PMI Premiums, and I've read and heard many complaints about it lately. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to do the drop test on the PMI since I either shot (I mean blew it up in my gun), or sold all of it to my friends. (Sorry guys, I wouldn't have sold it to you if I knew it was going to perform as poorly as it did.)
Anyway, I wanted to see if Big Ball is also suffering lately from whatever changes are being made at the factory with the new shell or oil-free process or whatever it is.
I followed Tom's instructions on the test exactly. I measured a spot on the wall precisely 6 feet above a concrete floor in my basement to use as a reference point form which to drop all of the balls. The numbers for the ten balls I used are as follows: 3,2,3,4,1,1,1,3,1,3. That averages to 2.2 bounces per ball. That is awful. At least, I think it is, being that I play rec ball and would rather have a ball curve slightly off target than break in my gun and affect performance for the rest of the game.
Now, Tom says to throw out the high and low ball, so that gets rid of the only fresh ball (the 4) and one of the super fragile balls (a 1). After removing those numbers, it averages out to 2.125. That's even worse than before.
Granted, I did the test with cold paintballs straight off the UPS truck, but that's what the playing conditions are here during a Michigan winter...cold and dry. I wanted to know if Big Ball would perform any better than the PMI Premiums I had such bad luck with this weekend. For now, it doesn't look like it.
I don't know what is going on lately, but I have never broken so much paint before as I have been recently. Even in previous winters, I haven't had this much trouble with paint. My bad days used to be one ball break all day (500-1000 rounds). Now it's more like 1-5 a game. That's just not what I'm used to.
If the PMI/RPS is doing something different in the manufacturing process, I think they should go back to what worked. I am willing to pay a little more money to avoid the frustration and problems associated with ball breaks.
Nathan
I had a terrible weekend with PMI Premiums, and I've read and heard many complaints about it lately. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to do the drop test on the PMI since I either shot (I mean blew it up in my gun), or sold all of it to my friends. (Sorry guys, I wouldn't have sold it to you if I knew it was going to perform as poorly as it did.)
Anyway, I wanted to see if Big Ball is also suffering lately from whatever changes are being made at the factory with the new shell or oil-free process or whatever it is.
I followed Tom's instructions on the test exactly. I measured a spot on the wall precisely 6 feet above a concrete floor in my basement to use as a reference point form which to drop all of the balls. The numbers for the ten balls I used are as follows: 3,2,3,4,1,1,1,3,1,3. That averages to 2.2 bounces per ball. That is awful. At least, I think it is, being that I play rec ball and would rather have a ball curve slightly off target than break in my gun and affect performance for the rest of the game.
Now, Tom says to throw out the high and low ball, so that gets rid of the only fresh ball (the 4) and one of the super fragile balls (a 1). After removing those numbers, it averages out to 2.125. That's even worse than before.
Granted, I did the test with cold paintballs straight off the UPS truck, but that's what the playing conditions are here during a Michigan winter...cold and dry. I wanted to know if Big Ball would perform any better than the PMI Premiums I had such bad luck with this weekend. For now, it doesn't look like it.
I don't know what is going on lately, but I have never broken so much paint before as I have been recently. Even in previous winters, I haven't had this much trouble with paint. My bad days used to be one ball break all day (500-1000 rounds). Now it's more like 1-5 a game. That's just not what I'm used to.
If the PMI/RPS is doing something different in the manufacturing process, I think they should go back to what worked. I am willing to pay a little more money to avoid the frustration and problems associated with ball breaks.
Nathan

i decided to do a drop test 
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