BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 91 definitions for Angel.

Angel (paintball)

Print-Friendly
About 4 pages (1,045 words)

Bookmark and Share Know this topic well? Help others and get FREE products!

The Angel is an electropneumatic paintball marker manufactured by APS (formerly WDP). First introduced in 1997, the Angel, along with Smart Parts' original Shocker, defined the cutting edge of marker technology when it debuted.[1] As one of the first electronic markers on the market, the first Angel featured firing rates (in terms of balls-per-second) well into the double digits - an achievement previously unheard of.[2] The Angel was initially distributed in the United States by Brass Eagle as the "1455 Angel Semi-auto", advertised with a rate of fire of 15 BPS (balls per second). This distribution deal with Brass Eagle was short lived, and WDP quickly began distributing the Angel independently. The Angel has since been modified and refined by WDP with many new models released. The most current model is the Angel 1.

Contents

History

The engineer responsible for the design of the Angel was John Rice.[3] From conception, the Angel was designed as an "HPA-only" marker. Rice considered CO2 a "dirty gas", and the Angel used several miniaturized components that could not withstand impurities in the air or the cooling effects of CO2.[4] Consequently, WDP released the Gov'nair high pressure air system at the time of the original Angel's release. In 2001 WDP released the Angel A.I.R. high pressure air system to be paired with the Angel line of markers. The system utilized an adjustable-pressure regulator featuring an LCD display system to monitor both tank and output pressures. Trigger speed was also a determining factor in the design of the Angel. Much of the motivating force for designing the electronic firing sequence was to build a marker that anyone could shoot well, with an extremely short learning curve.[5] The especially light trigger allowed even the most novice players to achieve rates of fire that were previously unattainable, even by many professionals. At the time, the development of an ultra-light trigger pull was unfamiliar territory to Angel designers, and early models of the Angel would fire when a light breeze accidentally activated the trigger.[6]

Operation

The mechanical design of the Angel is very simple in principle, especially to those familiar with the markers predating the Angel. The linked bolt and hammer, stacked-tube design is very similar to low-end blowback markers, such as the Kingman Spyder. The solenoid 4-way valve (referred to a "14-way" by Angel engineer Rice[7]) that drives the ram is an electronically-controlled version of the 4-way valves mounted to the front block of Autococker markers. The firing sequence is electronically controlled, and starts from the open bolt. At the pull of the trigger, an electronic impulse trips the 4-way valve, pushing compressed gas through the ram from behind, forcing the ram and bolt assembly to move towards the valve, impacting the poppet and releasing gas to the chamber. The paintball is fired with this gas, then the 4-way solenoid reverses, and delivers gas to the front of the ram, returning the ram and bolt assembly to their starting position.

Design Evolution

Major Design Revisions (in chronological order of release):

  • Angel v6 (Pre-release prototype model)
  • Angel (Known today as the "Angel LED" to differentiate it from the subsequent Angel models which use an LCD programming interface)
  • Angel LCD
  • Angel IR3
  • Angel Speed
  • Angel 4
  • Angel 4 Fly
  • Angel Speed 2005
  • Angel G7
  • Angel G7 Fly
  • Angel Speed 2006
  • Angel One

References

  1. ^ Angel Tech Page - Angel History at Ultra Twisted Paintball
  2. ^ Has Paintball Technology Reached a Plateau?, Mohammed S. Alo, April 2004, The Paintball Times
  3. ^ Angel Tech Page - Angel History at Ultra Twisted Paintball
  4. ^ Interview with John Rice, in Davidson, The Complete Guide to Paintball, Hatherleigh Press, New York. 1999
  5. ^ Interview with John Rice, in Davidson, The Complete Guide to Paintball, Hatherleigh Press, New York. 1999
  6. ^ Interview with John Rice, in Davidson, The Complete Guide to Paintball, Hatherleigh Press, New York. 1999
  7. ^ Interview with John Rice, in Davidson, The Complete Guide to Paintball, Hatherleigh Press, New York. 1999

External links

  Paintball

Glossary of paintball terms

    edit
Equipment:

Paintball marker, Electropneumatic paintball marker, Paintball equipment

Paintball Markers:

Angel, Ariakon Overlord, Autococker, Automag, Bob Long Intimidator, Bushmaster 2000, CCI Phantom, Dye Matrix, E Matrix, Excalibur, ICD BKO, ICD Freestyle, ICD Promaster, PGP, Planet Eclipse Ego, Proto SLG, RAP4, RAP99, Smart Parts Ion, Smart Parts Shocker, Smart Parts SP-8, Spyder MR1, Spyder MR2, Spyder Rodeo, Spyder Victor, Tippmann Custom, Tippmann A-5, Tippmann C-3, Tippmann SL-68 II

Positions:

Player positions (paintball), Speedball backman, Speedball centerman, Speedball frontman, Woodsball marksman, Woodsball rifleman, Woodsball scout, Woodsball specialists

Game Styles:

Paintball variations, Recball, Scenario paintball, Speedball, Stock paintball, Tankball, Woodsball, Woodsball strategy, Slingshot paintball

Media:

Blackballed (film), The Whiteboard, Greg Hastings Tournament Paintball, Greg Hastings Tournament Paintball MAX'D, Gotcha! The Sport!, Gotcha! (1985 film)

Other Objects:

Paintball tank, Paintball pistol, Bunkers, Inline blowback (paintball)

Companies:

Airgun Designs, Brass Eagle, DYE Precision, Empire, Indian Creek Designs, JT Sports, Kingman Group, Planet Eclipse, Smart Parts, Special Ops Paintball, Tippmann, Warped Sportz, APS (fomerly WDP), Worr Game Products,

People, Tournaments, and Major League Teams:

List of professional paintball teams, Team Avalanche, Team Dynasty, Russian Legion,Tippinators, NCPA (paintball), Oliver Lang, Ultimate Arena Paintball League, List of paintball leagues, NXL, National Professional Paintball League

View More Summaries on Angel (paintball)
 
Ask any question on Angel (paintball) and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
Angel (paintball) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy