Your marker could be leaking from a small pinhole in your frame, or it could be leaking out of the CO2 adapter itself. you may want to have it checked, if it is a electric marker, you could freeze your circuit board.
There is likely a problem with your sear, if it is mechanical, or with your board if it is electrical. You should immediately take the gun to a tech, as you wont be able to play of a field with a runnaway gun.
The purpose of a paintball gun is to fire paintball pellets, to mark opponents in the game of paintball.
A paintball gun needs CO2 (or HPA) to fire at all.
you need Co2 to fire any paintball gun, it is what physically moves the ball out of the barrel.
No. A paintball gun is not considered a fire arm anywhere because it does not use an explosion to propel a metal object.
the safety, take out the co2. Or, just contact the manufacturer or take it to a local paintball shop to get it repaired.
i don't know i don't do paintball but its probably the type of gun that you have i think theres some that fire like 100 yards
Yes, it is what physically moves the ball out of the barrel.
Yes, on large property with the owners permission, or at a field.
It is not a good practice to dry fire paintball markers, as it can give unnessicairy wear to the o-rings.
Eyes are like little sensors in the gun to tell wether a ball is there or not. No ball, no fire. This prevents breaks in the gun.
A paintball marker is a paintball gun. It is just called a marker instead of a gun.
no, because the air is what pushes the paintball out off the barrel.