As an airsoft gun owner, you should want to take care of your investment so that it can be used and enjoyed for years into the future. Having an airsoft gun that wears out before it’s time or starts malfunctioning due to poor airsoft gun care is not only entirely avoidable, but also really unnecessary. If you’ve just purchased an airsoft gun and are looking for ways to keep it in prime condition, here are some great airsoft gun care tips to consider.
Cleaning the Barrel
The barrel of your airsoft gun should be cleaned after every use. If you live in a sandy environment, this is especially important. If you own an electric airsoft gun, you’ll want to fire several shots in the semi-automatic mode in order to decompress the gearbox once you’re done firing, though some guns have a button which will decompress the spring. With spring air guns, be sure not to leave the gun cocked, with the safety on to help prevent accidental injury. You’ll also want to consider spraying a non-corrosive silicone spray into the gun barrel and hop-up chamber occasionally to help keep your airsoft gun in good working order.
Magazine Care
For electric and spring airsoft guns, you’ll want to empty the magazine after each use to help preserve the strength of the magaine spring. This will help ensure long time enjoyment from your airsoft gun. Magazines for gas airsoft pistols though should be left pressurized so that all the necessary seals stay in tact. If the gas you’re using doesn’t havae silicon lubricant in it, then add a drop or two on the internals, otherwise you should be all right. Always remember that when expelling gas from your airsoft gun to never use the release valve, as you run the risk of freezing the O ring which can cause gas leakage in the future.
Observing the Batteries
Batteries are an important part of the lifepan of electric airsoft guns. Be sure to use batteries with the correct voltage. A battery with excess voltage will cause the gearbox to cycle at a rate that could damage internal components of your gun; while a battery with voltage too low can result in lack of power to cycle the gearbox at all. You will also need to be aware of the mAh of your battery. This will indicate how long a battery will continue to power your gearbox. Batteries with a higher mAh have a higher current draw which will increase the firing rate of your gun.
Airsoft Gun Touch Ups
As you continue to use and enjoy your airsoft gun, you may notice the paint starting to scratch or wear off. Experts typically advise against touching up your gun. If a full repainting is required be sure to use a flat, enamel based spray such as Krylon, or check with an airsoft retailer who will offer painting service to return your airsoft gun to it’s original appearance.
With the proper airsoft gun care, you can ensure that your air gun will be in excellent working order for many years to come!
Here’s a great rifle with great power. Includes the Hop-Up system and shoots 0.2g BBs. It has two BB feeding systems. For the fun of motion and action, use the rotary cartridge magazine which holds 5 shells. The shell casing ejects after each shot. Going for the capacity and not the fuss, try the direct feed tube magazine…. Super 9 Pro has an increased muzzle velocity of 370fps (1.27J) with a .2g BB and an effective range of 117ft. Rifle is 47 long and uses a magazine feed cartridge for maximum realism. Magazine capacity is 25 rounds for direct feed, or 5 shells (included). This is a spring gun, which means it’s powered by a spring and must be cocked for each shot. It’s fast, clean, inexpensive and easily maintained; it requires no gas or batteries to operate. Also, spring guns are the toughest, most durable of all airsoft guns, because they’re made with few breakable pieces. If you’re looking for a fun, reliable airsoft rifle that’ll look great and perform even better, you’ve come to the right place…. New generation of airsoft. HOP UP system. Velocity:~ 420 FPS w/ .12g bbs,~ 370FPS w/ .2g (recommended), ~ 330FPS w/ .25g…A 1:1 scale replica of a bolt-action rifle, the Super 9 airsoft rifle is remarkably authentic. The airsoft rifle fires round pellets known as BBs, which are propelled out of the gun by a spring mechanism. The advantage of the airsoft rifle, however, is that players can safely train, simulate, or play with the gun without fearing serious injury. The airsoft rifle looks, feels, weighs, and functions just like a real firearm, but is built for casual recreation rather than weaponized use. In fact, the only way you can typically tell a real-steel firearm from an airsoft rifle is the blazing orange tip and the BBs that fire when you pull the trigger. The rifle includes a hop-up system and two different magazine options: a rotary cartridge magazine that holds five shells (the shell casing ejects after each shot) and a direct feed tube magazine. Spring guns are the toughest, most durable of all airsoft guns because they’re made with the fewest breakable pieces.
Specifications:
Velocity: Approximately 370 fps with 0.2-gram BBs, 420 fps with 0.12-gram BBs
The Airsoft Skirmish Game has it’s roots in the higher-power skirmish game of paintball. There is some contention in the Airsoft community, as to when the first true ‘Airsoft’ model was marketed, but what is known, is that an American air gun manufacturer, Daisy, marketed what they called a Softair gun in the late 1970s and early 1980s, which fired a miniature 6mm hollow plastic shuttlecock-like projectile, and incredibly low speeds, from a toy gun. The intention, it would appear, was to develop a new market for its products. They succeeded, and a new generation of rifle shooters was born.
This series of softair guns are generally thought, on balance, to be the ancestors of what we now know as Airsoft models.
Shortly after Daisy marketed their softair guns, Tokyo Marui, then marketing self-assembly plastic replica gun kits, modified some of their designs to fire the same form of projectile. Within five or so years, they had all but halted production of the 1:1 replica kits, and gone into full-time production of virtually 1:1 self-assembly low powered ‘ASGK’ Airsoft kits, firing a new 6mm spherical plastic projectile. Within another five or so years, in the early 1990s, spring powered Airsoft models became ‘old news’, as the first generation of Automatic Electric Airsoft Guns, or AEGs, were marketed, not as self-assembly kits, but ready to use out-of-the-box models, of remarkable realism and accuracy to the real-world counterparts that they represented.
The rest is history, as well over ten main-stream manufacturers in Japan, Taiwan, and other p art s of the far east, have sprung up to supply a brand new hobby sport, that uses these models in mock-combat games, called Airsoft Skirmish Games.
So, now we know the history of the models, how about the game?
The original hobby sport combat game is, of course, paintball, and this has been so well documented over the years, that it would be redundant to go into its origins here. However, paintball is illegal in Japan , which has probably the strictest firearms laws on the planet. This means that no-one may own any form of firearm privately, without a great deal of red tape to comply with, making it, for all intents and purposes, a non-starter. The same applies to paintball markers, which, as I understand it, are classified as firearms in Japan .
However, the Japanese, due to their culture of group-led activities, do enjoy combat games. How they accomplished this prior to Airsoft models being manufactured is beyond me (do you know? PLEASE tell me!), but the introduction of these models gave them the edge they needed to develop the hobby sport, which they get involved in, in truly massive numbers; it’s not unusual for there to be well over 100 players at any given playing venue, on any given playing day, and well over 500 players at a competition/convention event!
The rules to the game originated in Japan . Similar to the Paintball Skirmish game, there are one or two major differences. Firstly, the Airsoft models have a much lesser range than paintball ‘markers’; second, there are no paint gel projectiles used in the Airsoft Skirmish game, thus an honor system predominates. The fact that paint is not used to mark your opponent could have been a major problem. However, since personal honor is a way of life and culture in Japan , an d disgrace follows a cheat in that country, they found that to get the rules to work, all they needed to do was rely on their innate codes of personal honor. Thus, if you were hit by an Airsoft projectile in a game, you were required to declare this, and remove yourself from the game. It worked, too, as cheating tends to spoil the fun of the game for every one else involved. The basic rules were, therefore:
You cannot use physical force, as the object of the game is to shoot the opposition, and have fun – it is, after all, only a game.
If you’re hit, you’re out of the game.
These are the rules that form the basis of the Airsoft Skirmish Game, and, for all practical purposes, have not changed one bit.
The game then grew, moving to Hong Kong , Korea , Taiwan , and the Philippines . It was then only a matter of time before other countries saw, and adopted the game. It appeared in America and Canada at about the same time, and Europe during the mid 1990s, but it is only in the last three to five years, that the hobby sport has started to thrive in the UK.
Now, in mid 2000 AD, there are well over twenty playing sites in the mainland UK alone, and more planned. However, the feature that appeals to the hobbyists most of all, is also the most controversial feature: the realistic nature of the models used in the game. It was therefore paramount to professional site operators that some checks and balances were imposed, in the form of self-regulation. This has resulted in an unwritten code of conduct, that, broadly speaking, mirrors air weapon rules. These unwritten rules appear to be codified into the following:
No one under the age of seventeen (18 in the USA – this text added by Strike Back Now 6-18-04) should be permitted to purchase an Airsoft model.
Airsoft models should NOT be shown in public places, and the Safety rules that apply to real air weapons and firearms should, in the most p art , apply to Airsoft models.
So far, then, this seems to be a good start , and would appear to work in the majority of cases. It remains to be seen if the APAC campaign will result in a more formal code of conduct for the UK Airsoft scene, but one lives in hope.
This, in mid 2000 AD, is where the hobby is at. A minor, but legal (if somewhat controversial to some), hobby sport, enjoyed by hundreds of people around the country. In any event, both the technology, and the hobby, appear to be here to stay – and long may that continue!
How to play:
To get started playing Airsoft all you really need is an Airsoft Gun (if it’s a spring gun) and some BBs. The most affordable guns start at under , so Airsoft is a hobby that virtually anyone can afford. Once you have a gun and some BBs, you can practice shooting at home against a target, you can shoot cans in your backyard, or anything like that. Airsoft guns are actually made to be able to shoot at other people safely, when proper safety precautions are taken (i.e. eye protection, body covering).
Ever wanted a motion tracker heartbeat sensor area scanning gps device? 50 years ago this was science fiction. Now it’s a fully fledged reality. Buy it at www.redwolfairsoft.com Redwolf Airsoft and T-cubed bring you the MT1268 motion tracker. The MT1268 motion tracker from T-Cube is essentially a small, lightweight GPS device utilizing satellite technology to find its own position but then using UHF radio signaling to report its position to other motion trackers in the area.
1/1 Scale Assembled Plastic Model Gun This spring-powered repeating M3 SWAT team airsoft bb/paintball shotgun comes with pack of bbs. Shotgun holds up to 100 bbs. Included in this kit is the P618 pistol which holds about 9 rounds and shoots approx 160 FPS. A very nice collector and practice gun…. This is a detailed 1:1 scale replica airsoft gun selling at a very affordable. It is not as durable and consistent in performance as our other high grade airsoft guns. This airsoft gun is intended for beginner level shooting. Please note that because this airsoft gun is meant for beginners and entertainment, We offer one week warranty on this item. If you are looking for a gun that will provide long-term performance, we recommend looking at our other high grade guns…. CYMA Airsoft Super Gun…
This item is not for sale in some specific zip codes
TSD Tactical 6mm Extreme Precision Competition Grade BB’s are Super Slick, Double Polished to achieve the ultimate precision and the least possibilities of BB jams