Wats The Real Hype

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • DaFranchise1987
    Registered User
    • Jul 2004
    • 25

    #1

    Wats The Real Hype

    okay i got this teamate whos in love with cockers even though he hasnt shootin or own one yet, but its deff his next gun. We were arguing like always 'bout how good mags r if there not used by proteams i said its cause agd doesnt sponsor any pro teams to my knowledge and focuses more on the development of there products that advertisements or wateva and i was like untill the hairline comes out mags arent gonna be in the hype that currently surrounds paintball markers today, i said that cockers r deff part of the hype, along with timmys and angels and shockers, is this tru and if it isnt what markers r hyped up?? thkx

    !!!!DaFranchise IS HERE!!!! :shooting:
  • nt2004
    yeah, thats right...
    • May 2003
    • 832

    #2
    they are the original hype. Personally, i beleive cockers are nice guns but they are also some of the first guns to be overhyped. Remember all the "cockers defy physics and have super flat trajectories" or the "closed bolt is more accurate" crap? Sure you do, because a lot of people still beleive it.

    Cockers are nice guns but yeah, they are hyped
    ** AO-IL **
    My Setup
    Demolition Paintball
    RogueFactor, for all your mag needs!
    I KNOW THE REAL KOOF!!!

    Comment

    • Blazestorm
      I win
      • Feb 2002
      • 3523

      #3
      I do believe it to a point.

      Think about it... the closed-bolt has the ball completely still then lets out a quick burst of air onto the ball. This is going to be more accurate or have a more consistent trajectory versus if as the ball is being pushed into the barrel (while rolling) then getting blasted by air.

      I believe that's why people feel cockers shoot that way, I believe it too. Even if it is not true, pick up a cocker and shoot it next to a mag, the balls will travel differently.
      My Feedback
      UBLPB. UBLPB. UBLPB.

      Comment

      • nt2004
        yeah, thats right...
        • May 2003
        • 832

        #4
        Originally posted by Blazestorm
        I do believe it to a point.

        Think about it... the closed-bolt has the ball completely still then lets out a quick burst of air onto the ball. This is going to be more accurate or have a more consistent trajectory versus if as the ball is being pushed into the barrel (while rolling) then getting blasted by air.

        I believe that's why people feel cockers shoot that way, I believe it too. Even if it is not true, pick up a cocker and shoot it next to a mag, the balls will travel differently.
        Yeah but they will end up in the same place.
        ** AO-IL **
        My Setup
        Demolition Paintball
        RogueFactor, for all your mag needs!
        I KNOW THE REAL KOOF!!!

        Comment

        • Carbon
          Word!
          • Jan 2003
          • 1589

          #5

          I believe that's why people feel cockers shoot that way, I believe it too. Even if it is not true, pick up a cocker and shoot it next to a mag, the balls will travel differently.
          your kidding right? so a cocker shooting at the same fps as a mag the balls travel differently? how so?

          okay i got this teamate whos in love with cockers even though he hasnt shootin or own one yet, but its deff his next gun. We were arguing like always 'bout how good mags r if there not used by proteams i said its cause agd doesnt sponsor any pro teams to my knowledge and focuses more on the development of there products that advertisements or wateva and i was like untill the hairline comes out mags arent gonna be in the hype that currently surrounds paintball markers today, i said that cockers r deff part of the hype, along with timmys and angels and shockers, is this tru and if it isnt what markers r hyped up?? thkx
          First off, its called punctuation. Please use it, this aint PBN.
          Last edited by Carbon; 07-22-2004, 09:13 PM.

          ...ever in the continual search of time dilation.

          Emag 4.0 "I love the way you turn me on"

          Comment

          • Blazestorm
            I win
            • Feb 2002
            • 3523

            #6
            Feet-per-second is only the speed.

            A ball rolling forward with air pushing behind it is going to have more spin then...

            A ball standing still with air pushing behind it.

            And no the paint will not land in the same spot, it may be within 5-10 feet of eachother, but I did some tests, same FPS, same barrel, cocker vs. mag and the cocker had shots that went farther (not all of the time) and they were FPS spikes either, had the gun on a gunstand which was on a level table shooting across a level field.

            It's the way the gun shoots, we could argue for days on end, but I still believe cockers will not put as much spin on the ball compared to mags, which allows them to go farther distances.

            (Farther distances could mean 3-4 inches. )
            My Feedback
            UBLPB. UBLPB. UBLPB.

            Comment

            • Jaremy Rykker
              Slack Man
              • Jun 2004
              • 84

              #7
              I conducted a basic experiment to test the theory that the operation of an open-bolt system applies a forward roll to a paintball, and I have arrived with the result of the experiment in that "No. An open-bolt system does not apply a spin to a paintball prior to the shot."

              And here we go.

              Hypothesis: Open-Bolt Systems create ball-spin
              Materials: Red Sharpie, 15 Good Rounds of Draxxus Rec-Sport, Tippmann Model 98 Custom

              Testing Procedure: I used the red sharpie and placed a red line along the seam of the paintball. After this marking had been placed on each of the fifteen paintballs, I placed them carefully in the breech of the Tippmann, certain that the seem was horizontally level. At this point, I would flatten out the gun using clamps, and place my face directly in front of the breech so that I could see any ball movement by noting motion in the red line. I would then place my hand right on the bolt, and pull the trigger, catching the bolt before it could push the ball forward. At this point, I would slowly drag the bolt forward, watching carefully for any motion in the ball, until the bolt had completely come forward and pushed in the pin on the back of the valve.

              Testing Results: Of the 15 balls, none had any visible rotation. The ball seemed to recieve its motion completely from the bolt itself pushing the ball, and there was absolutely no visible rotation.

              Conclusion: An open-bolt system applies no additional rotation to the ball which a closed-bolt system would not, and the nature of the system does not have an influence on the rotation of the ball.
              Slack man of "Not the Limeys" LRRP

              "Hit!"

              "Hit!"

              "Hit! HIT! Hit!"

              "STOP SHOOTING"

              ------------------------------------------------------

              Donate to my TAC-ONE Fund!: $421.75/$489.59

              Comment

              • Jaremy Rykker
                Slack Man
                • Jun 2004
                • 84

                #8
                And no the paint will not land in the same spot, it may be within 5-10 feet of eachother, but I did some tests, same FPS, same barrel, cocker vs. mag and the cocker had shots that went farther (not all of the time) and they were FPS spikes either, had the gun on a gunstand which was on a level table shooting across a level field.
                Furthermore, we have noted that there are a lot of major inconsistencies which you did not control. Atmospheric conditions, wind factors, and all sorts of slight differences can cause differences in paintball flight that are far greater than even the hype might suggest open-bolt does. And we all know that hype is rarely true, and even less accurate.

                You didn't account that even with perfectly setup guns at distance, there still isn't a perfectly accurate shot. We are shooting the equivalent of semi-automatic muskets, and to expect them to be natural accurate no matter how expensive they are is a fruitless hope.

                So, no. Your testing is neither well-controlled, and nor is it necessarily accurate. There are hundreds of variables that very much affect paintball flight, and without a lot of specially designed equipment, there is no way you, nor I, could control these.
                Slack man of "Not the Limeys" LRRP

                "Hit!"

                "Hit!"

                "Hit! HIT! Hit!"

                "STOP SHOOTING"

                ------------------------------------------------------

                Donate to my TAC-ONE Fund!: $421.75/$489.59

                Comment

                • Blazestorm
                  I win
                  • Feb 2002
                  • 3523

                  #9
                  A bolt doesn't move slow, as we already know with a mag, it moves incredibly fast, depending on bolt shape, the material the ball is made out of (PMI Shells have a shell that are smoother and roll better then Draxxus paint which feels more gelatin)

                  No test is perfectly accurate, it is impossible to have a perfect test in an imperfect world.

                  There is a paint stack as well, with weight on-top of the ball, when the bolt moves forward removing that stress from the top of the ball, that is yet another factor.

                  There are too many variables to have a test that can prove anything.

                  Put a cocker and a mag next to eachother and shoot them, the trajectory WILL BE DIFFERENT.

                  It's pointless trying to find out WHY the trajectory is different, so why bother?

                  Blaze is done... blaze walks away to go play the sport, not care what happens when you pull the trigger
                  My Feedback
                  UBLPB. UBLPB. UBLPB.

                  Comment

                  • AcemanPB
                    Exactly
                    • Mar 2002
                    • 1885

                    #10
                    Well under rapid fire you can pretty much throw out any differences between open and closed bolt guns. They are both moving alot of paint really fast so there is no time for a paintball to get "settled" in. And really, how much paintball do you play when your not shooting atleast 10bps.

                    And this is just a guess but any spin that could be put on the ball by the bolt would be canceled out by the barrel. I know cockers "feel" different and they might look like they have a flatter trajectory from behind the gun, but from the sidelines you can tell it doesn't. Someone needs to do a heavily video taped and documented experiment to prove this. I know it won't make everyone believe but it will atleast provide some really evidence.

                    Comment

                    • Blazestorm
                      I win
                      • Feb 2002
                      • 3523

                      #11
                      You can't throw it out.

                      The paint is still resting for a moment before air is shot at it. Inbetween each shot the bolt is staying still.

                      Unless you are maxing the cockers ROF (Shooting as fast as the pneumatics can cycle) then you can throw out the effects, but until then, that effect is still there.

                      Plus who cares what it looks like from the side, YOU'RE the one shooting the gun, how it shoots should matter to you
                      My Feedback
                      UBLPB. UBLPB. UBLPB.

                      Comment

                      • XbeasleyX
                        Best Of The Not So Good
                        • Apr 2004
                        • 233

                        #12
                        um

                        uh - just my $.02 - With an open bolt the bolt accelerates very quickly and pushes the ball up to the equivalent speed, THEN hits it with the air to make it go even faster, now with the open/closed bolt scenario wouldn't this make it go further than having a completely stopped ball being hit with the same amount of air?
                        I wish I was a zombie, but I'd be a smart zombie like Jesus.

                        Comment

                        • AcemanPB
                          Exactly
                          • Mar 2002
                          • 1885

                          #13
                          Originally posted by XbeasleyX
                          uh - just my $.02 - With an open bolt the bolt accelerates very quickly and pushes the ball up to the equivalent speed, THEN hits it with the air to make it go even faster, now with the open/closed bolt scenario wouldn't this make it go further than having a completely stopped ball being hit with the same amount of air?
                          The bolt really doesn't do a whole lot pushing. All it does is load the next ball in the breach, it's not like the ball is getting pushed then hit with air. The air does 99% of the work.

                          Comment

                          • Blazestorm
                            I win
                            • Feb 2002
                            • 3523

                            #14
                            He beat me to it.

                            The bolt moves the ball what... maybe an half-n-inch into the barrel. then shoots the air, or in the mags case I believe air is released while the bolt is moving forward.
                            My Feedback
                            UBLPB. UBLPB. UBLPB.

                            Comment

                            • Setzer
                              Registered User
                              • Jul 2004
                              • 84

                              #15
                              This thread has all the answers:

                              Named after the IBM super computer, Deep Blue is headed by Tom Kaye, president of AGD. This forum is open to the public, but only high end technical subjects are allowed. If your posts don't cut the mustard they will be moved.


                              Read it, read every last post, from start to end. If you do not understand it, then it is currently beyond you to grasp why a small amount of movement from the bolt will *not* effect a ball in flight at all. If you do understand it, then the answer of why it has no effect on the ball is in there.

                              Open bolt/closed bolt has no effect on a ball in flight. Read that thread for why. Also remember, open bolt and closed bolt just refer to the position of the bolt when the gun is at rest. All guns fire with a bolt closed.

                              Comment

                              Working...