Custom made Draxxus medium grade field paint that was engineered and designed specifically for use at Richmond Indoor Paintball.
A paintball is typically 0.68 inches in diameter. The size of the paintball affects gameplay by determining its accuracy, range, and impact on targets. Smaller paintballs may be more accurate but have less impact, while larger paintballs may have more impact but be less accurate. Players must adjust their tactics and strategies based on the size of the paintballs being used in a match.
To hold paintballs, so that you can reload faster during a match as well as carry more.
at Paintball arena in Fun Addaa, Pune you can play paintball using Co2 and compressed air as well, Co2 is used to give the paintballs extra pressure so that it can travell with a high velocity.
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.
Monster balls are simply another brand of paintball. Many fields have banned Monster ball paintballs due to their excessively tough outer shell causing injuries on the field and damange to property.
The first paintballs were created by the Nelson Paint Company (1950s) for forestry service use in marking trees from a distance, and were also used by cattlemen to mark cows. Two decades later, paintballs were used in a survival game between Charles Gaines and Hayes Noel in the woods of Henniker, New Hampshire, and Paintball as a sport was born.
These are two separate questions, but yes, barrel lenght and propellant affect the distance and accuracy of 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.
If a military is not using simunitions, they use paintball. The negative feedback of getting hit and it showing along with the ability to use powder or water rounds make it a much better option than airsoft.
Since paintballs are used as sport or as nonlethal means for riot police (sometimes with capsaicin powder fill, and at higher velocity then recreation) they are not an alternative to guns at all.
No, most fields won't allow the 6mm paintballs used in airsoft/paintball hybrid markers; definitely check with your field before bringing any.
No, it will not break paint. "Underboring" (using a barrel with a smaller bore than the paintball), is a thing used to gain maximum efficiency and consistency from a paintball marker, since no air is escaping around the paintball, and the same amount of air is pushed against it every time.