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In 1990, Smart Parts produced their first in-house marker. Called the Boss, the Smart Parts pump marker featured a spiral ported barrel and a 'shoebox' style body (which would be mirrored in their first electronic gun design); The Boss was targeted at high-end woodsball tournament players but was not well-received, being considered to be too heavy and too large (when compared to offerings such ...
Empire Paintball Axe: 0.68 in Empire Paintball Dfender 0.68 in Empire Paintball Mini 0.68 in Empire Paintball Sniper 2012 Empire Paintball Resurrection Autococker Auto-cocking 2013 0.68 in Evil Minion Evil Omen: Side-feeding stacked tube mechanical marker, similar to an Autococker Evil Pimp: Evil Scion FASTech Paintball F1 Illustrator FASTech ...
The Overlord has what is claimed to be the fastest available loading system for a paintball pistol, the Rapid Release Magazine System. [1] A lever at the back of the system releases the magazine, which is ejected with the help of a spring. The pistol's power supply is a 12 gram CO 2 powerlet. Brass Eagle 12-gram cartridges are known to work ...
The Tippmann TPX is a low-cost, high-performance paintball pistol. Eight- or seven-round magazines are inserted into the bottom of the grip like a normal pistol. The pistol features an A5/X7 threaded barrel, making it compatible with all A5/X7 barrels that are 7/8 inch in outer diameter.
A paintball anti-tank gun. This one has an effective range of 140 meters. A "paintball bazooka", or a "paintball rocket launcher" is usually a spud gun styled to resemble some existing AT weapon to specifically "kill", or "take out" paintball tanks. Modified and masked paintball markers serving the same purpose are also used.
Tippmann's TPX pistol is their first .68 caliber paintball pistol that is designed to feed paintballs using magazines. Magazines made for the TPX pistol were designed to hold eight paintballs originally, but are now sent with a newly designed seven paintball configuration to prevent breaks.
For modern paintball guns, this technology is considered outdated, as they cannot fire as many shots as a modern large-capacity CO 2 tank can provide, though some still use Powerlet cartridges for stock paintball. They are also still favored for paintball pistols, for players wishing to run "light" with considerably less weight.
The CCI Phantom is a Nelson-based pump action paintball marker developed and produced by Mike Casady. Production began in 1987 after about six months of prototype work. The name for the marker was derived from the much more stealth-oriented and drawn-out style of play that was typical when the game was first developing.