Friday, March 4, 2011

Paintball Hoppers: Helpful Tips on Buying One

By Jerry Garcia


Paintball players know that having plenty of ammunition on hand could help you win the battle and thus they are constantly searching for the ultimate paintball hoppers. The hopper holds the paint balls and is attached to the top of the gun from where it feeds balls into the firing chamber. Different hoppers work in different ways serving different needs, so we will investigate them one by one.

Players at a pro level focus on using force-feed hoppers that give them constant firing power with almost no failures. The force-feed hopper pushes the paintball using a spring loaded system into the barrel from which it is fired. A counter on the hopper keeps you informed of haw many shots are left, a great advantage to prevent running out of ammo at the wrong time.

Agitator hoppers make use of a fan like propeller to churn balls in the holding area. This stops the ammunition from sticking together and blocking the feeding tube into the blasting chamber. This hopper works almost as well as the force feed hopper, but getting it wet may halt the whole workings, so keep it dry at all times.

Gravity-feed hoppers come standard with cheaper guns and use gravity to line up balls for firing. Not known for their reliability as balls tend to pile up in the feeding tube, causing your gun to stop firing. Gravity-feed hoppers can handle up to eight balls per second during firing.

Guns that work with a pump action use stick-feed hoppers that hold twenty four paintballs. The feeder attaches under the gun and balls are loaded by dipping the gun before the next shot is fired.

As with many other sporting equipment, paintball hoppers are evolving to fit the higher levels of gaming. Professional players seek hoppers that can hold up to three hundred balls whilst amateurs are quite happy with a capacity of 40 balls in their loaders.




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