A couple of weeks ago, I went out to play some woods ball, scenario style. Unfortunately, the day was cold and rainy. Oh well, I had my warp hooked up and my mag was ready to go. I ran my CO2tank remote, and chronoed my mag in. 275, +/- 5. Not too shabby. Between bouts of rapid fire action and long periods of doing nothing, along with the weather as it was, my tank got very very cold. I run clear macroline into my valve, and my roomate noticed some liquid going into the valve. I must say that it looks pretty cool, kinda like a nice fog effect...back to the point, even though I was running remote, with a six stage expansion chamber, I still managed to dump quite a bit of liquid into my valve. I knew that wasnt the best thing, so I shot my mag into the ground, and it began venting...I began to think that my day was done, as I forgot to bring my parts kit. Well, I undid my pro-connect, let all the gas escape my gun and tried to get going again. To my surprise, when I hooked my proconnect back up, the gun gassed up perfectly. I shot it, no problems, it wasnt leaking or anything. For the true test, I took it back to the staging area and chronoed in. First shot 280, followed by a string of 273, 275, 275. Words can not describe how amazed I was by this "miracle", after all, mags cant run on CO2
On a side note, I did have to loose my warp shortly after starting play, the paint swelled up so badly from all the water, that the warp wouldnt slip past it.
More proof that mags work just fine on CO2
-Chris
On a side note, I did have to loose my warp shortly after starting play, the paint swelled up so badly from all the water, that the warp wouldnt slip past it.
More proof that mags work just fine on CO2
-Chris




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