Hi lads n lasses! Just chucking up a post with the paintball community to help me out as I’ve been out of the sport for abit And gasping to get back into it! I’ve got a lot of my own kit still which is always half the battle but just looking to upgrade abit with markers and air tanks etc! So at current I have a dye nt 11 which needs a little tlc but with it age is it still as good as current markers out there? I’m looking to get at eclipse marker as wanting a change from dye! Maybe a etek if one comes available on here. And on air tanks, I’m more of a walk on day to start with so is it worth just getting a 3000psi basic tank or just spend abit more and get a 4500psi Which I know is lighter? Most days I went on they only aired upto 3000 so was no need for a 4500. Anyway any help would be appreciated
For the gun - if it works then it will still hold it’s own.
Gun rate of fire and hopper feed rates have not changed, technology could squeeze out some more speed or efficiency but maximum ROF is capped
For the cylinder it’s up to you for preference.
Fills will still be mostly 3000psi except for certain events. If 4500psi fills are available then 3000psi fill stations will still be there
A true like for like 3000psi aluminium is heavier than the same sized 4500psi fibre.
BUT a ‘standard’ fibre is bigger than a ‘standard’ aluminium and the weight difference is negligible
Benefits of an aluminium are:
That they are a fraction of the cost, even if you dispose and replace instead of testing
If the site accepts it then aluminium’s can be used for 10 years without a hydro test
If you can get local testing then it may be cheap enough to make hydro tests viable, and then the cylinder could be used forever as long as it keeps passing and the regulator & burst disks remain good
Benefits of fibre are:
They are in assorted shapes and sizes
Can be comfortably used as a stock and rolled in your shoudler
Higher capacity if 4500 fills are available
Slightly higher capacity at 3000psi for the difference in ‘standard’ sizes at similar weights to aluminium
‘Ultra light’ fibre cylinders are much lighter than aluminiums
The ‘new’ international ISO standard has cylinders that never expire (subject to 5 year hydro testing )
.