Let me just start by saying that I love the my ULE RT and wouldn't trade it for anything. After watching Z-Man's video http://www.zakvetter.com/Videos/RT%2...oot%20Test.mov, I reassured myself of how nice a gun I really own.
All this talk about the Ion and how it's supposedly just a disposable marker got me thinking about the business end from Smart Parts point of view. The marketing scheme is so one-sided that it's just a joke to me to read what kind of propaganda bull**** that they're spewing out. At the same time though, it's still great marketing because the demand is so huge and people are buying into it.
I've never shot an Ion, I can only gather information from what I've read here and heard elsewhere. I did hold one, and it didn't feel nearly as heavy duty as my mag...felt more like a toy. If it is true that the guns will start falling apart after a year or two, instead of fixing the old parts, it probably would be cheaper to buy a whole new gun. Smart Parts advertises that the Ion is a High-end tournament grade marker out of the box. I've heard that it is a good gun, but many don't consider it to be as high as they promote it out of the box, it needs a couple hundred in upgrades.
My point is, my ULE RT out of the box needed no performance upgrades at all because it's such an amazing gun. I also am confident that no major parts will fail if I do proper maintenance. Is this what paintball has come down to, large companies selling low quality guns so that the instead of replacing several parts on a broken gun, the customer just buys a new one? Are we seeing an end to high quality guns that could possibly last a life time?
All this talk about the Ion and how it's supposedly just a disposable marker got me thinking about the business end from Smart Parts point of view. The marketing scheme is so one-sided that it's just a joke to me to read what kind of propaganda bull**** that they're spewing out. At the same time though, it's still great marketing because the demand is so huge and people are buying into it.
I've never shot an Ion, I can only gather information from what I've read here and heard elsewhere. I did hold one, and it didn't feel nearly as heavy duty as my mag...felt more like a toy. If it is true that the guns will start falling apart after a year or two, instead of fixing the old parts, it probably would be cheaper to buy a whole new gun. Smart Parts advertises that the Ion is a High-end tournament grade marker out of the box. I've heard that it is a good gun, but many don't consider it to be as high as they promote it out of the box, it needs a couple hundred in upgrades.
My point is, my ULE RT out of the box needed no performance upgrades at all because it's such an amazing gun. I also am confident that no major parts will fail if I do proper maintenance. Is this what paintball has come down to, large companies selling low quality guns so that the instead of replacing several parts on a broken gun, the customer just buys a new one? Are we seeing an end to high quality guns that could possibly last a life time?




. Of course parts wear out from use. Most of the time its just seals, etc. When they do, replace them.....yo dont throw your gun away. I think the plastic body is decieving, because the gun is made of aluminum. I guess the aluminum firing chamber and breach could wear out from those seals and air going through them.
Comment