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Cheap Paintball Gun - Avoidable
Mistakes That Buyers Make
Author:
Stephen Turner
Are you about to buy a cheap paintball gun? Will it be your
first paintball gun? If so, you really should read this article
before you buy, since it might just save you an awful lot
of grief. So many first time buyers of cheap paintball guns
end up hating their first gun because they made one of several
common mistakes, all of which are avoidable. Read on to find
out how not to fall into the same traps.
Do you hate your first paintball gun? Oh dear, where did it
all go so wrong? Well here are a few possibilities, and all
of are avoidable.

Rushing to purchase after too little time
on the field
Too many first time buyers of cheap
paintball guns rush into buying a paintball gun when, sadly,
they have not spent enough time playing the game to know how
to judge a good paintball gun from a bad one. Further, they
don't really know what sort of player they are, or what sort
of game they like to play. Only once you have been playing
a while will you know how to spot a good gun, and what sort
of gun will suit your game. Crucially, you will also have
had some experience of bad rental guns, perhaps even terrible
rental guns, but the up-side is that you won't own any of
them!
The rental equipment at the field of play is universally poor,
but it is what you should be using the first few times you
play. Don't focus on the gun; focus on the basic tactics of
the game. Then once you have played a few times, borrow a
cheap paintball gun from a friend for a short game. How is
it better? Why is it better? What do you really like about
it? What don't you like about it?
Not doing sufficient (any) research
By borrowing a friend's gun and taking
it for a field test you are performing the most important
part of research. You are learning what a cheap paintball
gun can do in your hands and you are assessing it. But so
many first time buyers of cheap paintball guns just rush out
and buy without doing any research at all. Within as short
a time as a week they can be regretting their haste.
Only then does the first time buyer get on the internet to
read up on their subject. They visit content websites devoted
to paintball guns, they read reviews, visit paintball forums
and within as little as a few hours on the right sites they
know where they went wrong, and what they should have done.
They learn that there are so many cheap paintball guns out
there, and only some of them are good guns. They learn that
paintball guns are technical products, with a fair bit of
variation and range. Unfortunately, for many the knowledge
comes to late. They are out of pocket, and out on the field
of play carrying a blunderbuss when they should be carrying
an assault rifle.
Yeah, but it looks great.
It's bright metallic blue, or red, or
yellow, or orange or any other ridiculous colour that gives
your position away in a wood as easily as if you had lit a
fire. Choosing your paintball gun solely or primarily on the
basis of looks is a shocking thing to do, and if you are reading
this article having made this most schoolboy of errors, I
just hope you were lucking and that your good looking gun
also turned out to be a good gun.
Never judge a gun buy its looks. Some nice looking guns are
rubbish. Buy the gun because it is a good gun when judged
against a reasoned criteria: because it will last, will help
you win games, be more reliable etc. If it looks good, great.
But keep in mind that if you want to stay hidden 'black and
matt is where it's at'. The gun should blend into the surroundings,
and not give your position away.
Really? So where do I get the mask from?
As far as the rules go, the mask is
the crucial bit of paintball equipment, since without it you
cannot enter the field of play. However, many first time buyers
forget to buy a mask, or to budget for one. As a result, they
end up with a cheap mask, one which fogs up and is really
uncomfortable. Keep in mind that you are going to be wearing
this thing all day. If you have to keep taking it off every
20 minutes to adjust it for comfort you will be risking your
eyesight from a paintball. If a referee sees you he might
send you out of the games for good. So budget for a good comfortable
mask, that will not fog up.
Yeah I upgraded the barrel! 21 inches!
It's a well known that replacing the
barrel that comes with your average cheap paintball gun (known
as the stock barrel) will improve its performance. Knowing
this, many first time buyers mistakenly go for length when
they buy a new barrel (known as an aftermarket barrel). '21
inches, yeah that must be a good one. Size matters, doesn't
it?' Well yes it does, but in this case small is beautiful.
Don't go above 14 inches, any longer and performance will
suffer.
Buying a high maintenance gun
As a new player, the last thing you
need is a gun that needs constant oiling, or tweaking with
tools in the field. You need a gun that will just work consistently,
no frills, no fuss, leaving you free to concentrate on learning
the game. Good cheap paintball guns will just get on with
the job, and adjustment of them in the field, for example
changing velocity, will be easy. Similarly, a good cheap paintball
gun will be easy and quick to clean.
I'm new here, so I figured I'd get the best gun available
For better or for worse, paintball has
got a bit of attitude. There are few things that irk experienced
players more than the sight of a clueless new payer ambling
around the field carrying state of the art, top of the range
hardware. Yeah I know, they are only jealous, and they probably
dream about owning your gun.
But there is also a serious point to make here about maintenance.
A good cheap paintball gun will have the performance and durability
advantages of an expensive gun but none of the advanced features
- which only an experience player will be able to really take
advantage of. A good cheap paintball gun will also be very
easy to take apart, clean, and reassemble. Contrast this with
many expensive guns which can be a real maintenance headache
for someone unfamiliar with paintball guns. Taking it apart
is easy, putting it back together is the hard part, and expensive
paintball guns tend to come with big but not necessarily clear
manuals. You could be staring at highly complex schematics
wondering how life got so complicated.
So keep things simple. Buy a good cheap paintball gun, and
then concentrate on the playing. Learn the tactics, and learn
about yourself as a player. Meanwhile, you'll be cleaning
your basic gun in no time at all.
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