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October 4th, 2009, 04:13 | #1 |
Western Arms
Iv been looking around at different pistol gbbs and so far have been recommended only one brand... Tokyo marui(which i now have)
People keep saying its the only hand gun i need and iv been hearing nothing but recommendations and good things about it. anyways! If it were between tokyo marui and WA which one would you guys prefer? How are WA Gbb's? Hows the quality? So far when it comes to price i keep seeing WA as cheaper than TM(when i say this i mean stock vs stock and custom vs custom). Can anyone tell me about the general quality of WA and why or why not its good? Any general info would help, and i wont mind it being compared to TM. Thanks! p.s. if i posted this in the wrong place pls tell me where i can post questions like these.
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Pacific Recon |
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October 4th, 2009, 04:41 | #2 |
WA's are for hanging on the wall, and TM's are for gaming.
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October 4th, 2009, 05:02 | #3 |
Lol that actually says alot if not all!
I can still use some info on its odds and ends
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Pacific Recon |
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October 4th, 2009, 06:26 | #4 |
Official Crybaby Chairsofter
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WA gbb feel and look awesome, especially compared to TM.
But they can be finicky... |
October 4th, 2009, 09:30 | #5 |
Problem with WA I found is that replacement and aftermarket parts are hard to come by and quite expensive. Their pistol GBBs aren't very mainstream like TM.
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"Hey I'm the first one to say its a great country but its a straaaaange culture. This is a place where gun store owners are given a list of stolen credit cards but not a list of CRIMINALS and MANIACS. And now they're thinking of banning toy guns...AND THEY'RE GONNA KEEP THE F**KING REAL ONES!" -George Carlin 1937 - 2008 (RIP buddy) |
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October 4th, 2009, 12:59 | #6 |
Is there high quality WA that are as good as a TM of same quality?
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Pacific Recon |
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October 4th, 2009, 13:42 | #7 |
WA's are higher in quality than most
other stock GBBs. There are plenty of good reviews on them all over the web. Most who usually post to questions like this, know little to nothing. The main reason there has always been a limited supply of after market parts for WA's is because they have released so many different models in short runs. So the aftermarket parts are also in short runs. Obviously the SV & 1911 lines are more popular so more goodies were made for them. TM has limited 2011/1911 models that haven't changed in a long time so more can be released for them. All magna/scw1 are made extremely well inside. very little will break and no upgrades are needed for propane except for a 150% hammer spring and a metal slide. These models came with a heavy (metal powder mixed) abs slide that's a wee bit soft. The blowback/kick of WA's has to be experienced. Their mags hold more gas, last very long and the guns them selves are heavier than TM's, 'bout half of TM's 5.1 weight is in the mag. Scw2/3 are made a little cheaper but come with tightbore inner barrels, a stock inner barrel assembly that TM is coming closer to copying and different hammer system. Scw2 have the same weak slides, scw3 have newer abs slides with a metal layer in between 2 abs layers making them propane ready. Almost all WA's can use the stock recoil spring with a metal slide, because alu slides are typically lighter. WA's also don't suffer from the same metal slide + chamber damage that TMs do ie: the lugs sheer off under the slide, the plate where the chamber returns gets bashed until your gun get ruined. Collectors buy WA's also because they're licensed copies and have all the accurate trades/elements. I collect and game WA's, been running my main magna SV5 for over 5 years. Put a metal slide on it from day 1, replaced the nozzle after 5k shots, all the rest are stock parts I rarely clean. TM's have taken over the market due to the cheaper entry, good performance out of box, and because they're the honda, lots of dodads to customize your model which has massive appeal with the chairsofters. Anything I missed, feel free to ask.
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Retired — Freedom 35 |
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October 4th, 2009, 13:49 | #8 | |
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WA's used to fetch a fair bit more a year or 2 ago, than any other GBB's. But times have changed, most new guys have no clue about them or where to get the scare parts for old models so they avoid. Low demand has sellers unloading them for less or the same as a common TM. I'm sure 90% of the WA's out there have flowed through my hands over past few years lol. Meet me at TAC on a Friday and you can see and fire my WA game pistols. But don't blame me if you get bitten.
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Retired — Freedom 35 |
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October 4th, 2009, 22:59 | #9 | |
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Thanks for the info!
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Pacific Recon |
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October 4th, 2009, 23:55 | #10 |
Art affectionado
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October 8th, 2009, 13:00 | #11 | |
Quote:
Friday since it'll be a skirmish night. There's always some in the for sale area, hint hint.
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Retired — Freedom 35 |
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October 8th, 2009, 13:30 | #12 |
My WA Beretta 92FS Inox is the most accurage GBB I have, and it's bone stock. Unfortunately, I have never been able to locate a metal slide for it, so I never use the gun for fear of breaking it with propane. It goes back to what safx said. No parts available.
But when it comes to the cosmetics, it's the king of my collection. It's an absolute beauty of a gun. And it's actually hard to tell the gun is plastic when handling it because of the incredibly metallic look and hefty weight. I really wish I could locate an aluminum slide for it so that I could actually use it. I love that gun.
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October 8th, 2009, 13:32 | #13 |
I've got a WA 6" Infinity SV, old Magna internals, but they are in excellent shape (haven't been used much to my knowledge). It is a beast. I've fired it just a few times on propane (read: 5), because I don't have duster gas nor an adapter for it. The kick is absolutely unbelievable even compared to my FMU hicapa. The internals appear to be extremely rugged as well.
Same deal for me though, Crunch. My chances of finding one of those 6" alu slide for this gun is pretty slim. I don't know exactly where to look either.
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I love freedom and consequently America |
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October 8th, 2009, 13:36 | #14 |
I've tried all the Asian online sites to no avail. Last year I managed to find 1 metal slide (can't remember where), but in black, and they were out of stock at the time.
I have fired the gun on propane on the odd occasion, but always feel very uneasy about it. Usually never fire more than 1 mag before putting the gun away.
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October 8th, 2009, 13:52 | #15 |
Most of the stuff on Asian stores have
been sold to other countries, so you may have better luck looking at US sites like ASC and shops. And if you really want a custom slide, ILLusion or possibly ProG4 will do a custom for you. Brian quoted me one for close to $300, which isn't bad for "one-off" top end CNC aluminum with trademarks. Crunch— your inox was a very limited gun, so there was only a short supply of slides, most metal releases were in fmu kit form, which are all long gone. Ur— Just be patient, SV slides are not uncommon, one is sure to pop up on eBay or forums around the world, keep your eyes open
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Retired — Freedom 35 |
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