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April 22nd, 2013, 14:26 | #16 | |
Mr. Silencer
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April 22nd, 2013, 15:12 | #17 |
they do sorta, Ive only handled a few tight bore barrels in the past, (madbull, army force, and the one inside the lancer m4) but this one is almost more of a trapazoid shape then square... maybe because they are for M733, MC51, M1A1, and G36K and not so much m4s
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April 22nd, 2013, 15:14 | #18 | |
Traveling Man
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Last edited by BloodSport; April 22nd, 2013 at 15:17.. |
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April 22nd, 2013, 15:52 | #19 |
Glad to see people are changing their attitude toward other bb brands. IMO, Bioshot can be considered the best bio bb brand once they fixed their feeding issues as they seem more accurate than most BB's. I remember a few years back when I mentioned Bioshot bbs and people simply laughed at the brand.
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April 22nd, 2013, 16:14 | #20 |
Airsoft is pretty big, globally-speaking, and there are a lot of BB brands out there..
It's clear that Bastards are high performance and well-regarded as "reference" BBs. Canada however has a very limited window to the global BB market compared to even our neighbours in the US. It's reasonable to assume that at the very worst, Bastards are globally-speaking somewhere between pretty good and very good... But the question always nags at me, what else is out there? Especially in light of availability hiccups when it comes time for my team to stock up. Neither R-Hop nor 50+ round per second feeding speeds were first developed in Canada, and both of those performance extremes require either excellent feeding qualities or superb accuracy qualities for measuring technical progress, so it's clear to me that very very good non-Bastard BBs exist outside of this country. I don't know which OEMs are the good OEMs, and where all the known international gearbox tinkerers are getting their BBs, but I'm always looking for a deal on the good stuff, or a signal on what the good stuff even is. Navigating the tangle of who's-OEM'd-by-who and what's available in Canada for how much and arranging to ship dozens of very heavy bags is a lot of research, costs, and dead ends... If I had my way, BBBastard would offer a bulk deal of 0.3g bio-BBs for somewhere in the neighbourhood of 170 to 200 BBs on the dollar and I'd arrange to get them from Renegade) at a local game and my team's search would be over for good, but as it stands, there seems to be a shortage and I have missed my opportunity to have that conversation, so when Steve and John brought these in and said "check these out!" we figured hey, why not. Given the difficulty of quality-controlling, importing and shipping stuff like this, I appreciate the challenge that anyone bringing in BBs has before them, whether it be importers or local brands.
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"Mah check" Now you know |
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April 22nd, 2013, 16:29 | #21 |
"bb bukakke" KING!
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anyone tell me if their bioshot bags had all air/gas vacuumed out of them when they received them or where they puffed up with air inside?
I have a bag of .28s I bought elsewhere last year that's ballooned up but not the other .3 and .32 that are all unopened. Wondering if this is a sign of their decomposition stage. i haven't opened the bag yet, but the gas was pushed out so it's obvious the bag is not completely air tight, even new, but tight enough to trap gasses.
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I futz with V2s, V3s and V6s. I could be wrong... but probably, most likely not, as far as I know. |
April 22nd, 2013, 18:28 | #22 |
So far no issues with the Bioshot 0.28's with an LCT AK=74. I noticed they shot pretty straight.
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October 28th, 2013, 23:27 | #23 |
Figured I'd try BioShot after I ran out of Green Devils.
Nope. They do not feed properly in my KA M4 or KA P90. They feed OK in my KWA M4 after the first ten or so are gone (aka, mags need to be underloaded) and they feed ok in my VFC 417. I sold one of the BioShot bags to a team mate to use in his G&G GF85 GL AK5 and they feed fine in semi, but not reliably in full-auto. The Green Devils I used previously worked perfectly in all my guns. But then I heard the same thing about the Green Devils when I ordered them. "Works for some, doesn't work for others." |
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February 18th, 2014, 21:08 | #24 |
Sorry for the slight grave-dig, but I thought I'd weigh in my findings. Bought a pack of the .32s for my basically untouched CYMA 0.40- so far so good. It's a bit of a pain cramming the bioshots into CYMA's metal AK74 midcaps, thought I was going to break the speed loader, but they ended up feeding without qualm in both semi and full-auto. As far as accuracy goes, paired with a Lonex 6.03 barrel and PDI W-hold rubber I seem to be getting excellent groupings 170 to 200ish feet out, consistently hitting the target (in this case a metal sign with an approximate width of 8").
Haven't been able to really test the bb's with my ICS M4 though... seeing as its hopup is pretty screwed up at the moment. However they loaded and seemed to feed exceptionally well with Elite Force midcaps. I'll try again once I get a new rubber/unit. All in all I'm pretty happy with bioshot's offering, they'll probably become my go-to for outdoor games. Although I still have to try them out with my two KJW pistols once I pick up some more gas. On a side note, the stock CYMA hop up changer w/ W-hold rubber, when fully engaged, was still arcing the .32's into the air at a pretty steep angle. But I think getting an even heavier bb at the rate will be a bit overkill, especially for an AEG assault rifle. |
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