I just read with great interest in the new .55 cal paintballs that are being introduced.
Now, it occurred to me that a ball with less mass can be shot at a higher FPS and will hit with the same amount of impact force as a .68 cal paintball at 280 FPS. What would that number be though?
Here is what the press release says about the mass of the new paintballs:
"Q: What's the weight difference of SportShot ammo compared to .68 caliber balls?
A: SportShot ammo has a mass approximately 50 per cent lower than current .68 caliber RPS paintballs. The average .55 ball weighs 1.6 grams."
Obviously you would not just double the FPS because the force grows exponentially ... does anyone know the formula, or can figure it out for me?
Also ... it seems that shooting a smaller ball, at a greater FPS would give you greater distance and a "flatter" trajectory (which would be a big advantage). true or false?
You know what I'm getting at right ... true paintball sniper lol.
Seriously though, I'm just wondering what effect it would be if people started using smaller paintballs at a greater velocity. Already people are complaining that the smaller paintballs bounce a lot more, and there wouldn't be any reason to keep the chronograph limits the same as .68 cal paintballs ... in fact it would be scientifically wrong to simply pass along a safety standard when a major part of the equation is changed this significantly.
Now, it occurred to me that a ball with less mass can be shot at a higher FPS and will hit with the same amount of impact force as a .68 cal paintball at 280 FPS. What would that number be though?
Here is what the press release says about the mass of the new paintballs:
"Q: What's the weight difference of SportShot ammo compared to .68 caliber balls?
A: SportShot ammo has a mass approximately 50 per cent lower than current .68 caliber RPS paintballs. The average .55 ball weighs 1.6 grams."
Obviously you would not just double the FPS because the force grows exponentially ... does anyone know the formula, or can figure it out for me?
Also ... it seems that shooting a smaller ball, at a greater FPS would give you greater distance and a "flatter" trajectory (which would be a big advantage). true or false?
You know what I'm getting at right ... true paintball sniper lol.
Seriously though, I'm just wondering what effect it would be if people started using smaller paintballs at a greater velocity. Already people are complaining that the smaller paintballs bounce a lot more, and there wouldn't be any reason to keep the chronograph limits the same as .68 cal paintballs ... in fact it would be scientifically wrong to simply pass along a safety standard when a major part of the equation is changed this significantly.



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