There are no 45 caliber paintballs. If there were, you still could not use them in a 50 caliber, due to the barrel being larger and that you would have 1 and 1/4 paintballs in the chamber at a time, which would chop every time.
Yes. as long as they are .43 caliber.
No. They will be too large to fit in the gun or be fired out of the barrel.
any .68 caliber will work, really though go to a paintball shop, anything from a store that is not paintball specific will be pretty bad paint that has been sitting there for months
For optimal performance with a paintball gun, it is recommended to use high-quality, tournament-grade paintballs. These paintballs are more consistent in size and shape, which helps improve accuracy and reliability when firing.
Most use the .68 caliber "normal" paintballs, like the TPX and the Tiberius arms 8.0. However there are several, like the Kingman training pistols and some rap4 pistols, use .43 caliber paintballs. Also the Tiberius 8.1 and 9.1 can shoot the First Strike paintballs.
In U.K, the paintball fields set them at 270 FPS, but when you buy the gun it should be around 300 FPS, you can buy chrongraphs for $10-20 to test the FPS,
It depends on what type of marker it is, and what size of the paint you are using. Note: these numbers are average for 68-caliber paintballs (the most widely used size of paintballs). Your actual number can be higher if you use a smaller size of paintball (e.g. 50-caliber paintballs) If it's a hopper-fed, it could be somewhere from 100 to 200 on the average. If it's fed by a tube or some form of limited-paint format (like a paintball "magazine"), it could go from 10 to 20 paintballs or so.
No. only .50 caliber paintballs.
Anything that is designed to be loaded into a paintball marker that matches the bore size of the marker (can be from .50 to .68 caliber, and typically would be paintballs filled with water, other liquids safe for use in paintballs, or "reballs", paintball-sized rubber balls used for practice and or training). Use of any other spherical objects are not intended and may damage the mechanical components and may render it unsafe to operate.
No. most guns are .68 caliber, however there are some .50 and .43 caliber markers and pistols.
It actually will depend on the paintball gun you have. Typical markers do not need a cartridge, but a hopper (the thing on the top of the gun to feed in paintballs). Markers like the Tippmann TPX and the Kingmann Chaser and Eraser definitely need cartridge to hold the paintballs sense they are pistols.
Most paintball guns use an above hopper instead of magazines or clips like firearms. The standard hopper holds 200 rounds. Most magazines for paintball sim-markers are 30 rounds. No paintball guns use clips.