I have a recollection of reading an article somewhere years ago about the Ironmen in the late 80's early 90's, where it talked about how they were using a special run of paint from their manufacturers that they deemed "ironball." Apparently it was a larger caliber paint, and measured out at about .70 - logic being a larger/heavier/more force = more range and more breaks on target. Made a lot of sense. Was this real or just a tall tale?
It made me think about the recent trend of shrinking ball size and caliber and raised a question - Why aren't we seeing a brand out their today marketing and pushing a "larger" ball? (or at least a normal "old size" ball)
It seems with all the pseudo science that is often in paintball marketing, there would be actual real reasons why a paint manufacturer would be able to say "bigger=better so buy ours for a premium price".
...I guess i'm just annoyed with shrinking paint
It made me think about the recent trend of shrinking ball size and caliber and raised a question - Why aren't we seeing a brand out their today marketing and pushing a "larger" ball? (or at least a normal "old size" ball)
It seems with all the pseudo science that is often in paintball marketing, there would be actual real reasons why a paint manufacturer would be able to say "bigger=better so buy ours for a premium price".
...I guess i'm just annoyed with shrinking paint




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