A board itself is basically the brain of the gun. It is only found in electric guns, and it tells the gun the bounce, dwell, mode of fire, rate of fire, and anything associated with the gun. Virtue is a paintball brand best known for their high quality boards and crown systems for hoppers (hopper tops). Therefore, a virtue board is a board produced by virtue.
It is another name for Millennium Mode which is a "ramping" mode that is shoot a maximum of 15 bps after you have achieved 7.5 bps manually.
i prefer the virtue board. but they're both very good. my friend has an ion and he also uses a virtue board. but it is really up to you because they are both excellent boards.
It is a ramping mode that, as a minimum trigger pull speed is achieved, the marker rolls over into fully automatic for as long as minimum bps is kept.
The invery mini comes stock with semi mode, full auto, and three shot, and PSP mode. However, with a new board such as a virtue board, this adds multiple modes for your firing pleasure. A Tadoe board would work just as well too.
The Virtue board in a Vibe raises the rate of fire, amount of modes, and allows for more customizability. The only downside is the board costs as much as the Vibe itself. The vibe is 140 and the board is 110
It is an upgraded after-market board. A "board" is the circuit board and components that operate an electric paintball gun.
No. As a matter of fact virtue wont upgrade anything but the boards they make.
There are numerous aftermarket boards available. The most famous one is the Virtue OLED Ion board. This board comes with a screen and many new features for your Ion. Another popular board is the Blackheart board. Similar to the Virtue though there is no screen.
yes, they are the same grip frame and the same board in each marker.
ex officio
Ramping is when you achieve a set rate of fire, which will then "ramp" your rate of fire to a higher speed. Basically if you fire faster than a set rate (say 5 balls per second) then the mechanism will switch to fully automatic and "ramp" up the rate of fire to something higher (say 10 balls per second)