Electronic paintball trigger on rimfire?

mmattockx

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Has anyone adapted an electronic paintball marker trigger setup onto a semi-auto rimfire rifle or seen it done? Google is not my friend at the moment and I have come up empty so far.


Mark
 
Wouldn't be hard, but I'm assuming that would fall under some sort of law covering electronic assistance. If not, alot of paintball trigger setups are capable of semi, burst, full auto and "ramp" fire which allow more than one discharge with one pull of the trigger. thats definitely illegal.
 
Wouldn't be hard, but I'm assuming that would fall under some sort of law covering electronic assistance. If not, alot of paintball trigger setups are capable of semi, burst, full auto and "ramp" fire which allow more than one discharge with one pull of the trigger. thats definitely illegal.

This is one of the problems, but I assume it is possible to deactivate the burst and full auto functions. There is no law against electronic triggers themselves, some competition handguns use them currently.


Mark
 
I was capable of atleast 600-700 rounds per minute on my
ebladed auto cocker back when I played. As a machinist i can see a few ways to get one of those eblades on a rifle. As a machinist there are certain legal and unsafe things i don't do. I don't bore aluminum car rims, I don't make adaptors for grinding equipment, and this is now part of my list.

It's an interesting concept that should be persued no farther.

Won't work on front end car parts either. Too much liability imho.
 
I was capable of atleast 600-700 rounds per minute on my
ebladed auto cocker back when I played.
Every paintballer worth his salt knows you measure in BPS, or balls per second. but really anyone can send the board from and electronic gun down to the states to be re programmed,to full auto or to only semi, skys the limit.with the sensitivity on most triggers you would like end up with run aways, ive had markers where my trigger would run away cause it was to sensitive at on ramp mode at tourneys, it would just turn into a full auto from the recoil of a fire arm and paintball guns have much less recoil then that, but since a simple board swap could make it full auto it will be illegal no matter what you do.
 
Every paintballer worth his salt knows you measure in BPS, or balls per second. but really anyone can send the board from and electronic gun down to the states to be re programmed,to full auto or to only semi, skys the limit.with the sensitivity on most triggers you would like end up with run aways, ive had markers where my trigger would run away cause it was to sensitive at on ramp mode at tourneys, it would just turn into a full auto from the recoil of a fire arm and paintball guns have much less recoil then that, but since a simple board swap could make it full auto it will be illegal no matter what you do.

I multiplied my bps by 60 for those reading the firearm forum. I'm not sure the recoil from a. 22 rifle would effect most e-triggers, but the point about reprogramming them would make it illegal regardless.
 
Wouldnt an electronic trigger with a switch and simple solenoid (no board) be pretty hard to convert to F/A
 
This is true. I cannot think of any paintball marker with an electronic trigger that doesn't have a prgrammable chip however. A purpose built electronic system would circmvent the legal issues perhaps but having a triger pull in the ballpark of ounces on a rifle would require the utmost care in regards to trigger control.
 
The only electronic frames that could be used would be from a sear tripping marker (blowback, autococker/automag, tippman, etc) as full electronic markers now just trip selenoids. Add in extensive modifications to both the frame and firearm hammer, then think about material failure.

This doesn't sound like a good idea to pursue even if it proves to be legal.
 
It's an interesting concept that should be persued no farther.

Why not? There are already electronic triggers in use on target pistols. I just want to make my own with off the shelf components to simplify the FCG on a custom receiver design.


but having a triger pull in the ballpark of ounces on a rifle would require the utmost care in regards to trigger control.

I said nothing of a super light trigger, they can always be set to a heavier pull weight if necessary.


It would probably be illegal. I know you can legally "bump fire", but I think bump fire stocks are illegal.

Once again, there is no law against an electronic trigger system and any programming would be set for semi-auto only and fixed on that setting.


The only electronic frames that could be used would be from a sear tripping marker (blowback, autococker/automag, tippman, etc) as full electronic markers now just trip selenoids. Add in extensive modifications to both the frame and firearm hammer, then think about material failure.

Finally, some good info. I will look into the markers that use sears. I have no worries about material failures, I am a mechanical engineer and should be able to handle that side of things. My issue is I know nothing of the paintball markers and was looking for leads on them.


Mark
 
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