Unless you have certain Angel models, High pressure air is fine.
On a paintball gun C02, or High pressure air is necessary. It is compressed air that, when the trigger is pulled and the marker fires, propels the paintball out of the barrel.
No, All DP markers only run on High Pressure Air.
You can use co2 tanks if they are the anti-syphon tanks or if you put that on your tank put even then they are not recommended.
The CO2 tank is the propellant for the marker. It is very high pressure and is what physically shoots the paintballs out of the barrel, it is also what moves all of the internal parts, allowing the marker to fire and reload.
In addition to pressure, all tanks have a volume rating, which is the volume of air at standard pressure that they contain - most 3000psi aluminum tanks are aluminum 80's, which are 80 cubic foot tanks, but they come in sizes from 2ft.^3 for a pony bottle to 130 ft.^3 steel tanks, and sometimes even larger.
You would have to be a moron to try it and you would damage your marker.
The A1-Fly is the latest marker from Angel paintball. It is basically an A1, with newer grips and board.
Yes, if you have a low-pressure tank it may only be putting out 200-300psi of pressure. High pressure guns can sometimes take a minimum ot 600-800psi to function properly. If you don't have enough pressure for your gun it will not work correctly.
A compressed C02 tank or High Pressure Air tank propels the paintball.
T-Square Paintball, Jacksonville Arkansas
Yes the main difference is a SCUBA tank is used for high pressure breathing air (3200-5000 PSI). A paintball tank has a lower PSI rating and is also measured in ounces not PSI. Even though most people use a breathing air compressor to fill paintball tanks.
HPA means high pressure air, so it basically means everything you breath in compressed into a tank