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May 29th, 2011, 01:08 | #16 |
Cobalt Caliber
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That would mean that every week you have people who want to be snipers? This isn't CoD...
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May 29th, 2011, 01:18 | #17 | ||
Oh we do hate you, just never felt like wasting the time to give you a user title :P
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Or ya ok buy the vsr but dont forget the whack of upgrade parts you will need PSS10 air seal chamber PSS10 Red piston Reinforced 1st and 2nd seers many diffones around or can go with the Zero trigger and piston beter but more $$ spring prolly a pss100 or 120 will be around 450fps youll want a fancy tight bore and thats the the bare bones upgrade lotta time tweaking and lil crap to get it soohting somewhat beter then a highend AEG good luck im sure all the above has been said google is yer friend couldda got it with good spelling and grammer and prolly links to the parts too
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FinchFieldAirsoft |
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May 29th, 2011, 02:25 | #18 |
Let's break it down
To be able to call in "chopper gunners" you need to spend over $1000 in your "sniper". For ac-130's you need to machine your own parts (noobie is one example). Nuke is making a rifleable bb without killing anybody.. The following are in "american" dollars, and was how much I've spent so far Zero trigger ~$200 Edgi 430mm barrel ~$70 gspec $150 barrel spacers $15 Muzzle adaptor ~$15 "silencer" $15 Raven cylinder/cylinder head $100 Vacuum piston $56 PDI piston end $26 Pdi vacuum spring guide $16 PDI 360% $26 Scope $130-$70 (overstock credit) Bucking $10 ... I don't want to add it up because it will make me feel worse... considering this is only one of my guns... Last edited by krap101; May 29th, 2011 at 02:30.. |
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May 29th, 2011, 04:47 | #19 |
OP: I highly doubt you're 36 like you say. If you are then please write coherently and think about replies before posting. Also use the edit button instead of bumping the thread up by making 3 replies in a row.
Also take note that ASC has a long memory. Please try not to make a fool of yourself. A stock VSR will get the same effective range as a regular AEG. Once you add aftermarket parts like Laylax, PDI, EdGI, etc. it'll start to outrange regular AEG's but you're looking at dumping at minimum $600 into your rifle to achieve even a fraction of that. Also I believe Stalker and Amos both play with rifles that shoot at 400 and use .36's or something to that effect. FPS isn't everything, you also need flight stability and to be consistent with your shots (no use in using a pistol to try and snipe someone from across the field, use a rifle instead). In airsoft terms an M4 left stock except with an upgraded spring will not outrange nor will it be more accurate than the same M4 with upgraded compression unit, Hop up unit/bucking, barrel that shoots at stock speeds (say 330 for sake of argument). There are in fact some people who are in the "300 club" that play with stock springs (basically 1 Joule and under).
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ಠ_ಠLess QQ more Pew Pew READY TO >> RACE Last edited by L473ncy; May 29th, 2011 at 04:52.. |
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May 29th, 2011, 09:13 | #20 |
Running a sniper rifle requires more than a simple spring/gearbox swap, and higher FPS does not equal better ballistic flight performance. What you're looking for is ballistic STABILITY - i.e., relatively flat trajectory over long distances with minimal horizontal drift due to crosswinds. Stable flight is achieved using long tightbore barrels, a good quality hop-up, a tight compression chamber/piston setup and heavy BBs. This should get you flight stability over the distance.
What a higher FPS will do, however, is allow the BB to travel further before gravitational effects start affecting the flight path. The backspin from the hop-up is to offset gravity by providing lift to the BB during flight. Other equipment attached to the rifle - such as scopes, digital wind displays, bipods, zero/two-stage triggers, barrel stabilizers, etc. - will affect the accuracy of the firing platform (less drift, minimal trigger jerk, wind correction, etc.), but won't affect the flight itself. And as others have already said - get yourself AV'ed. If you're 36, it's a painless process. |
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May 29th, 2011, 09:39 | #21 | |
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@OP the average range for a stock TM VSR10 is about 125 feet
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Proud Member of the Strelok society Whoa guy with the thumb rings, save some pussy for the rest of us Welcome to Bed Bath and Beyoncé, if you find anything you like, put a ring on it. What idiot called them Black Bears instead of African Abearicans Last edited by SniperSam; May 29th, 2011 at 09:43.. |
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May 30th, 2011, 15:41 | #22 |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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+1, the average effective range of a stock VSR G-spec is around 125-150 feet. Performs poorly in wind as well.
I built my super accurate laser rifle VSR-10 for about $900. But it has no external upgrades done to it. FPS doesn't mean a whole lot when it comes to range and accuracy, it's all about compression. For example, Amos and I have the same VSR, however he had a 6.01 650mm barrel at 470fps, and I had a 6.03 430mm barrel at 380 fps. He had an extra 15 feet of range, and was actually slightly LESS accurate. Optimum FPS range for .30g BB's is around 400-430fps, if your running 450-470, you need heavier BB's |
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