are they really any more?
probably one of the only floating poppit regs left. bob still uses them, but everyone else has moved on the far better floating base regs.
done entirely by Craig at Palmers Pursuit Shop.
because, and this is a quote "Because Palmer regs are the super sauce!"
lol, i love evil genius...
1972341_782084041839583_8197986641442341311_n.jpg
are they really any more?
probably one of the only floating poppit regs left. bob still uses them, but everyone else has moved on the far better floating base regs.
social conservatism: the mortal fear that someone, somewhere, might be having fun.
The relay (on the Axe and Vanquish) is floating poppet, Bob's regs, as well as the AKA 2-Liter (for what it's worth).
I wouldn't say moving base are far better, although they are cheaper to make.
Ever so many citizens of this republic think they ought to believe that the Universe is a monarchy, and therefore they are always at odds with the republic. -Alan Watts
I work for the company building the Paragon
Fairly sure the AKA and Palmer regs are still some of the best on the market.
Why is floating base that much better?
The Zodiac ASA regs make up a floating poppet when coupled with the tank's pin valve. Nice way to save space, but then you'd have different outputs for every different tank.
I don't know, fly casual
But the Zodiak regs are very inconsistent. Mine is okay(it is coupled with the suggested output pressure tank reg), but i have seen others creep up while just sitting on the table. I would say mine is one of the good ones, yet i would not say that they are in the good range.
social conservatism: the mortal fear that someone, somewhere, might be having fun.
http://paintballgunmanuals.com/manua...ter-Manual.pdf
Last two ok, but I don't think the first two are true. A well designed floating poppet is faster than a moving base reg can be. Not sure what you mean by linearity beyond the properties of the spring.