No I went 4 hours straight on just a 9oz. tank
Yes, you can use any size tank
size is all personal preference, you can get something as small as a 9oz or up to a 24oz co2 tank, the larger the tank is the more shots you will get off of it but the heavier and larger it will be
The tank, has nothing to do with accuracy what so ever.
It depends on where you take it. I live in Georgia and go get my tanks filled at Dicks. In Canton the price is $2.99+tax for a 9 oz, and 3.99+tax for a 20 oz. And in Cumming it is 1.99+tax for a 9oz, $3.50+tax for a 20oz. So it depends by store but I would take it to Dicks because they have been the cheapest place I have found.
The hydro date is the number on your tank that tells you when your tank must be hydro tested (usually 5 years). Hydro testing is when you ship your bottle away to make sure it is still suitable to fill with pressure. 9oz tanks do not need to be hydro tested, or any other tanks with a diameter of less than 2 inches.
9oz are in 9oz.
A 9oz CO2 canister typically provides around 800-900 shots in paintball guns, depending on the marker's efficiency and settings. The thrust produced by a CO2 canister is not commonly measured in thrust units like Newtons or pounds-force, as it is more relevant to measure its capacity in terms of shots fired.
Yes. Standard 9oz through 20oz CO2 tanks work perfectly with the MR1. Compressed air paintball systems work fine too, with a regulator.
64 oz / 9oz = 7.1
There are 16oz to one pound16oz x 15lb = 240oz240oz / 9oz = 26.6Therefore 9oz goes into 15lbs 26 times remainder 6oz
a 9oz tank will most likely only shoot 200-300 rounds. There are though, many different variables to take into mind. This includes weather, the marker, and paint. well a 3.2 ounce shoots close to 300 so a 9 ounce would probably shoot 600+ but since many types of markers are different it would determine. ipersonally have a tippman and it saves alot