Some People Never Learn

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  • Cokrkilr
    Registered User
    • Jan 2013
    • 377

    #31
    Yeah, but ptp didn't design the body, someone else did and got them involved to make them... that's what I'm trying to say. The designer should have put this through the paces and make.sure his design was spot on before going to ptp...

    And I do believe someone thought milling things that close to popping through was a way to save weight or else why do it? Cuz it sure isn't attractive milling...

    Comment

    • going_home
      Hebrews 13:8

      • Dec 2004
      • 8343

      #32
      Tough Breaks

      Just read a few more pages.

      I can almost hear the footsteps of the towns people coming with torches.

      I probably wouldnt find this as interesting if I had gotten a refund for the proprietary sear pin I paid for

      before they finally said they were included, and for the extra t shirt I purchased.






      Those who cannot remember the past, are condemned to repeat it.
      George Santayana

      Comment

      • GoatBoy
        Junior Mint
        • Jun 2003
        • 1399

        #33
        Originally posted by Cokrkilr View Post
        The guy milling them is just doing what he's told to pay his bills. Sure a QC check would be nice. But if I came to you and said, "mill these exactly like this" and I were a paying customer with thousands in other peoples money... would you do it? Yes
        I sort of agree with the first part, the second part... is forthcoming. But yes, the machinist probably just executed exactly per instructions, so he's probably no more to blame than the tools he used.

        Originally posted by Cokrkilr View Post
        Sure ptp may do something to save their name in this deal, but I feel it isn't their fault and it should come at the cost of the designer... not a company just because they are big and powerful.

        But I guess that's why jobs like this go to the big dogs, they have the means to correct a multi unit screw up....
        You know, if I have to sit there and listen to how I don't know anything about some company because I wasn't around paintball in the 90's (which isn't true, but that doesn't mean I don't have to listen to it), you'd think that said company would have piled up enough wisdom to avert obvious disasters in 2013 on gun parts that... well, probably do go back longer than I've been in paintball.

        If the machinist didn't know that part A was supposed to meet up with part B, that's fine, he's just the machinist.

        But PTP are supposed to be the experts in the matter. They're supposed to know what's going on. They're the ones with all this history that goes back to .45 frames and detentes in the 90's and blah blah blah blah blah blah double triggers blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.

        I mean, if you're going to stamp one of your pet brands on it... QC'ing the product isn't optional. I don't see RRFireblade's name on the final product. I see Armson.

        (No offense to you Cokrkilr; love your SN by the way.)
        "Accuracy by aiming."


        Definitely not on the A-Team.

        Comment

        • Cokrkilr
          Registered User
          • Jan 2013
          • 377

          #34
          None taken at all.

          I do agree that ptp did produce the final product, its ptp's name on the line. But from the thread that was linked all I really saw was a designer that shaved off too much metal for.any type of tolerance in the milling process... I mean say 75% of the time the machinist loads the block of aluminum dead nuts, there is still a 25% chance it could be off by .00123456789".... and that would bring up the problem they are having now.

          If the designer would have left a mm more in his design on the sides of.the body this problem could have been averted to a certain degree... or at least possibly take the failure rate down to 1/30, instead of half of them. That's all I was getting at

          Comment

          • wetwrks
            Splatting since '85

            • Jun 2007
            • 1828

            #35
            Guys...PTP has been making paintguns for what...years? Decades?

            Then look at what else they are involved with...making grenade launchers for the military.

            They are supposed to be the "experts" in this area and have fallen down on the last 2 products they have put out. They have made promises that they have not kept and then have passsed the buck to others.

            Would this really fly for a military product? Wonder what would happen if they cut a grenade launcher too thin? Odds are someone would lose a hand and maby their life.

            Comment

            • GoatBoy
              Junior Mint
              • Jun 2003
              • 1399

              #36
              Originally posted by Cokrkilr View Post
              None taken at all.

              I do agree that ptp did produce the final product, its ptp's name on the line. But from the thread that was linked all I really saw was a designer that shaved off too much metal for.any type of tolerance in the milling process... I mean say 75% of the time the machinist loads the block of aluminum dead nuts, there is still a 25% chance it could be off by .00123456789".... and that would bring up the problem they are having now.

              If the designer would have left a mm more in his design on the sides of.the body this problem could have been averted to a certain degree... or at least possibly take the failure rate down to 1/30, instead of half of them. That's all I was getting at
              That's just the feedneck part, which indeed is a design issue and should have been caught at multiple levels.

              But now if you go back to the thread, you find that the milling underneath the barrel tube is too aggressive, and the front block o-ring is exposed.

              That's what I was referring to with the whole "part A is supposed to meet up with part B" bit. This is high school shop class hijinx sort of stuff.


              It reminds me of an experience I had in ... high school shop class. The teacher had a bunch of busywork for us to run on the machines, like the previous learning assignments. Cut this, do that, whatever. So everybody set about mindlessly doing their assignments.

              I was apparently the only one that stopped and looked at the entirety of all the tasks and realized they were not just independent busy work, but were meant to fit together. So when I did my tasks, I didn't just do what was asked, I made sure things were cut so that they actually fit. I couldn't do things perfect (in fact to this day I'm really quite terrible at manual labor and making things), but I could err in a way that would mate up with other parts properly. If I cut one part too deep, I cut the mating part a little more shallow. I never redid any parts.

              Toward the end of the project, the teacher let the cat out of the bag and everybody assembled their projects, and one by one, each one was graded. The assembled contraptions (turns out it was a desk lamp) were pretty hilarious. The joints were all over the place, arms leaning and twisted like dying trees. I think a few guys scrambled to redo their work, but highest grade I recall was in the 80's, maybe low 90's.

              Then I brought mine up to be graded.

              The teacher looked at it. Turned it. Looked at it again. Adjusted his glasses. Looked at it some more...

              I was the only one to walk away with a perfect 100.

              Sometimes, I wonder what became of some of my classmates.
              "Accuracy by aiming."


              Definitely not on the A-Team.

              Comment

              • Cokrkilr
                Registered User
                • Jan 2013
                • 377

                #37
                I missed the part on the o ring

                After all, one thread was like 20+ pages, the other like 14-15... I have stuff to do

                And yes I do get the analogy now that I am up to date on the o ring issue, haha. Ill come to a compromise for the sake of at least it was the cocker guys this time, it was 50% horrible design, 50% horrible quality control

                Comment

                • rx2
                  DBAF
                  • Mar 2002
                  • 496

                  #38
                  Originally posted by wetwrks View Post
                  Guys...PTP has been making paintguns for what...years? Decades?

                  Then look at what else they are involved with...making grenade launchers for the military.

                  They are supposed to be the "experts" in this area and have fallen down on the last 2 products they have put out. They have made promises that they have not kept and then have passsed the buck to others.

                  Would this really fly for a military product? Wonder what would happen if they cut a grenade launcher too thin? Odds are someone would lose a hand and maby their life.
                  This is essentially mirrors my take on the situation. They are government contractors. On one hand, you can argue that this is the reason that they are producing sub-par specialty products for a niche market - they simply don't have the resources to devote. On the other hand, though, this should at least mean that they are somewhat competent, and would know better than to put out a questionable design, and a final product that fails, and then repeat the same process a few years later. Sure, lowest bidder, and all that, but at the very least, one would imagine that they would look objectively at the fiasco that was the MM2K9 project, and the say to themselves "if we are going to get involved with something like this again, we had better make sure that we get it right the first time."

                  I was one of the pre-orders for the MM2K9. At the time, I wasn't really concerned about timeliness, as I was busy with too many other things to be actively concerned. To be honest, I haven't even assembled the thing, although I am not sure I will even bother at this point. Looking back, the whole thing was just handled badly, and too much blame placed on the customer. After all of the runaround, and shipping of essentially incomplete products, I think PTP's commitments were not completely fulfilled. Sure, they tried to rectify things with the spacers, but that created new problems for some.

                  "Oh, but PTP didn't design or mill it! It isn't their fault!" Again, they knew, or should have known what they were getting into. I have worked with people who do custom fabrications, prototyping, and multi-source projects. It's really almost a priori that, if you are going to attach your name to the end product, that you make sure that all of your ducks are in a row. You don't just accept a design willy-nilly, with no beta, QC, or prototyping prior to full-scale production, especially from someone who has caused a headache in the past. Mistakes can fall through the cracks, but if you are producing a product, in good faith, that is solely the fruit of outsourcing, you are the one who assumes responsibility. I realize that there is a certain fraternal sense in the paintball community, and a pass given to many things as a result. We are talking about a real company, with real contracts, who needs to be treated just as any other company out there. When a car company gives you a lemon, you get your money back, or go class action. You don't say "oh well, the engineer goofed, but that CEO is a good guy, so shame on me".

                  That being said, Forrest has, at the least, put some effort forth to try to appease customers. It may be too little, too late - at least as far as any trust or good standing goes. Let's just hope they QC a little better with their products that actually go "boom".
                  "My Jell-O is dying in the audience..."
                  Merrill Howard Kalin

                  Comment

                  • need4reebs
                    OutKasT 4 Sho!!!

                    • Feb 2011
                    • 1441

                    #39
                    regardless of who is right or who is wrong, or who did this or who didnt do that...nobody forced the people who sent their money for a product that wasnt built yet....after the first ever pre-order that went bad here on AO people still paid for a slot on the next pre-order? how many pre-orders have their been that have gone wrong? more than a few, right? alot of the pre-order issues could have been stopped after the first one went bad if nobody bought a spot on the second pre-order? think about this if your so smart, and you never make a mistake, why are you pissed off about another pre-order gone bad that you lost money on when you got burned on the last pre-order??

                    im not saying you to anybody in particular, but if you got burned on more than one pre-order then if something goes wrong you should get partial blame, cause once again nobody forced you to be the #1 slot on the next pre-order?

                    why not cut PTP some slack, they made a mistake on 2 of the recent projects they were involved with, but from what I've seen and heard from PTP, they have tried to make it right and/or did make it right for any issues i had which werent many at all...so as a customer m happy with PTP.

                    thats just my 2 cents about all this stuff
                    http://i257.photobucket.com/albums/h...8715822556.gif

                    Comment

                    • zondo
                      One of 8 bosses... again.

                      • Dec 2006
                      • 2245

                      #40
                      Originally posted by Cokrkilr View Post
                      I think you are talking about the micromag and I'm talking about this cocker issue...
                      Sorry... I have a one track mind lately.
                      Stay Classy, AO...
                      BEO: RIP / Topgun Paintball: RIP / Old MCB: RIP

                      Comment

                      • Jebus
                        Registered User

                        • Mar 2012
                        • 40

                        #41
                        This was my first pre-order from them - and will be my last - based on the photo's Tracy showed - they looked great - and was pretty excited until I received mine:


                        Sealed box:




                        Open the box and this is how it was packed:


                        I didn't remove anything covering the plastic, how you see it is how it was packed. Nothing protecting the gun.



                        Gun Photo's:


                        Multiple scratches on the gun, rub marks, and other awesome stuff:









                        Even the barrel is scratched up....awesome!

                        Comment

                        • blackdeath1k
                          Registered User
                          • Jan 2002
                          • 2436

                          #42
                          That's some piss pore packing right there.

                          Comment

                          • Ando
                            Magusmaximus
                            • Jun 2009
                            • 4144

                            #43
                            Paypal dispute. Send it back and eat the shipping cost.

                            They didn't even attempt to remove the machine marks. Could have done a once over with the bead blaster to at least cover over most of it.

                            And for you all that are talking about them doing things for the military.

                            Murphy's Laws of Combat Operations...your weapon was made by the lowest bidder.

                            I'd hate to see their work for the military.
                            Last edited by Ando; 03-13-2013, 10:26 AM.
                            My Feedback

                            Comment

                            • OPBN
                              OldPBNoob

                              • Sep 2008
                              • 5240

                              #44
                              It's been mentioned a couple of times about putting the blame partially on the machinist. Correct me if I'm wronge, but I thought PTP actually did the milling as well? They had a shop down in Longwood Florida.
                              My AO Feedback

                              Comment

                              • zondo
                                One of 8 bosses... again.

                                • Dec 2006
                                • 2245

                                #45
                                Wow. All those scratches... and is it me or is the Armson jewel not even on straight?
                                Stay Classy, AO...
                                BEO: RIP / Topgun Paintball: RIP / Old MCB: RIP

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