I wonder how similar the Warrior and iFit barrel kits are and if the Warrior will accept the additional inserts available for the iFit. Edit: The inserts for the Python and iFit kits are interchangable. I acquired a Python insert to test it with the Warrior kit. It fit well enough. It was not as snug as the Warrior inserts, but there was no play once the barrel was screwed in.
You could not be more wrong , The Main way to make your marker more accurate is to Bore your paint via a bore barrel kit. Barrel Length on the other hand has little to do with accuracy and more to do with looks and maybe a little velocity.
@@jamesfourseven8787 Sorry you are not correct, boring paint does nothing. To have it work you would have to bore every single paintball that you shoot. Do some research, its all been tested and proven that boring paint does nothing.
Boring paint is the best bet at better accuracy. It will not be completely fool proof but it gives you an edge. A .695 barrel with an average .685 paint will be incredibly inaccurate compared to the right size. It’s not 100% going to work every single time since there are many factors such as quality, humidity, packing etc but again it does give you an edge over just shooting a generic barrel. I’m not sure where you got your information where it doesn’t help unless you are confusing rifling to boring.
@@THeavyArmsT Dude I've done research on the paintball field playing paintball , and boring does provide a more consistent accuracy . Now its not exact but getting the bore of a handful of paint balls from a single box is how you go about it . Its not like we are using a micro-meter on each paintball, I mean after all these are musket balls we are firing so they are only so accurate to begin with.
I always get more consistent chronograph readings when I bore size. I usually make sure I go 0.01-.02 above what the paint is boring at to make sure it doesn’t break in the barrel