Bon:
You failed the test.
What you posted makes no sense at all. It reeks entirely of someone trying very very hard to post something that makes them look smart and in the process absolutely convinces the audience that they do not have a clue.
Here's a tip, if you follow one paragraph with another paragraph explaining how your first paragraph might not be true after all, what you've just done there is argued that you have no idea what you're talking about. If you did, you would have picked one or the other, not tried to advance both arguments so you can pretend to have been right either way.
Durring my week off (which was surprisingly productive!) I was thinking about this, and the heavier fill option to me while holding some merit wouldn't realistically work in practise.
Here's the first example: "While holding some merit" and then "wouldn't realistically work in practice". So what your saying is, it could work, except that it can't work? Does the idea have merit or not? Make up your mind! But no, you couldn't decide what the right answer was, so you just said both, forcing us to read a paragraph that MEANS NOTHING AT ALL!
A heavier fill means more raw ingredients needed
This sentence doesn't mean anything, because you didn't specify what you mean by "more". More volume? No. More mass? Sure. Which did you mean? If you meant volume, you're clearly wrong, and if you meant mass, then again, you just wrote another sentance that doesn't actually mean anything, because your sentence would say "A heavier fill means heavier ingredients are needed." Gee, thanks for that valuable insight.
Besides, you've missed what really matters entirely. It doesn't matter if MORE is needed. What matters is that DIFFERENT materials are needed. Then the question becomes, are the different materials more or less expensive?
, im assuming that somewhere along the way to make it more profitable, certain items are "watered down".
Well, that depends - is the new heavier fill material more or less expensive than the lighter fill material? Or about the same? If it's less expensive or about the same, "watering it down" certainly wouldn't make it more profitable. So right off, your assumption is baseless.
A from a business perspective mass producing paint to be used on the feild would invlove maximising how much watering down you can do.
Only if heavier fill is more expensive.
Eliminating the heavier fill option.
Unless, of course, the manufacturer just paid the costs of having a heavier fill (if a heavier fill is even more expensive than a lighter one).
Plus, your logic is dead broken anyway. If a manufacturer must water down anything as much as possible to mass produce it effectively, how come paintballs are not all just filled with 100% water? Clearly a paint company that fills their paint with just water would save the most money on materials and be the most successful, right? And on top of that, not only is the paint cheaper, but if you get thirsty on the field, just pop a pod and you're all set!
The standard paintball, as you shoot it undergoes various laws of physics,
Oh my god! I can't believe we missed that! Stuff obeys laws of physics! It was staring us in the face the whole time!
now simplified down, I would imagine they go something like this.
Simplified is not a synonym for "made entirely wrong".
[*]Ball accelerated, shell deforms slightly, paint inside the shell gets pushed to the back.
The ball doesn't deform. It's a sphere with uniform pressure on the surface area of each hemisphere. Also, in order for the paint to get pushed to the back, there has to be empty volume within the sphere, of which there is a negligible amount.
[*]Ball leaves barrel, shell stards to snap back into normal shape,
Except it wasn't out of shape.... what shape do you think it was in?
Assuming for a second that the paintball does change shape, how does reverting shape induce spin? The paintball is symmetrical in all directions about the axis of travel. If the left side and right side are the same, is it going to spin left or right? (Answer: The seam, the only part that is not symmetrical, will determine. And the seam is randomly oriented.)
some paint on the inside of the shell moves with the shell,
Does the paint get together and vote on who gets to move with the shell and who has to be in the blob? Or is paint divided up into shell followers and blob followers? OR is it just that the lazier paint stays in the blob with most of the other paint and only the more proactive paint moves with the shell?
however the majority of paint just sits there against the back of the ball as a blob.
What if they don't have enough votes? Do the minority still sit against the back of the ball?
When the paint exits the barrel, it's all going in the same direction at the same speed. It is all going to continue to go in the same direction at the same speed unless some force acts on it to change that. That's just basic Newton's 1st Law. If you don't even understand that, you have no business even using the word "physics". Not even "simplified" physics, since classical mechanics *IS* simplified physics!
[*]Ball flies through the air, wind resistance, other factors kick in, due to the majority of the mass of the paintball not spinning, the accuracy of the ball falters.
This is the least wrong part of your post. External forces will change the trajectory of the paintball. If the ball were to be spinning (which it isn't), it has angular momentum, and it takes more force to change the angular momentum, thus reducing the impact of external forces on trajectory.
A flatline would i guess force the ball to spin faster upon exiting the barrel, so more of the paint mass is spining with it,
uh-huh..
but still leaving a lot to be desired.
What the hell does that mean? Seriously. Leaving a lot of WHAT to be desired?
I do however, believe a barrier inside the paintball attached to the shell would work (imagine cutting an orange in half, then each half having its own fill of paint, attaching them together to make the ball), so rather than having the shell spin and merely rub against the paint, it would have an active "stirrer" causing a centrifuge effect forcing the paint to the outside edge and spinning with the shell.
*IF* there was any spin, this would make the paintballs less accurate, since the divider would be randomly oriented relative to the direction of spin. If the divider happens to be perpendicular to the spin axis, it has no effect. If it's parallel to the spin axis, it has maximum effect. Random resistance to force is the last thing you want for accuracy.
This would also have the knock on effect of reducing the impact forces needed to break the shell, the central barrier would cause weak points where it connects to the outside shell, so when it hits it would be more likely to break on these points.
Dead-ass wrong. Additional structure INCREASES strength, not decreases it.
Implementing this however, is something for those clever boys to work out, if possible at all.
Oh, so this is all possible, unless it isn't possible. Thanks.
Oh, so it IS possible, if it is possible?
Here's a tip: If you want to pretend you have any understanding of something, you have to also pretend you are right. If, after spewing a bunch of BS, you then tell people it might not be true, then everyone knows you're full of it, because you just said so!
But the heavier fill option to me seems like a very bad arguement
An option is not an argument!
For future reference, the "Brain Box" forum is designed for people with substantially effective brains to discuss various topics. It is not the box where your brain is stored. Come back when you find that box.