B
Ball Detent: A round device inside some paintball guns that keeps a paintball
in place until the gun’s bolt pushes the paint into the barrel, thereby
stopping more than one paintball from loading into a paintball gun’s
chamber per cycle.
Barrel: n. The tube on the front of a paintgun from which the paintball
is discharged when the gun is fired. Paintball barrels can be made from aluminum
alloys, brass, stainless steel, ceramic or carbon fiber. The major characteristics
of a barrel are its interior diameter, length, and effective length.
Barrel Condom: n. (slang) See barrel sock.
Barrel Plug: n. A piece of plastic or metal, usually with an o-ring, designed
to fit into the front end of a paintball gun barrel as a safety precaution
in the event of an accidental discharge. With modern fast-firing electronic
markers it is possible for an accidental discharge involving multiple shots
to blow a barrel plug out of the barrel and still injure a bystander and
thus barrel socks are preferred.
Barrel Sock: n. Also barrel condom. Evolved from the barrel plug, the barrel
condom is a cloth or nylon sleeve that is placed on and around the tip of
the barrel to prevent paintballs accidentally fired from the paintball gun
from hitting anything. Two chords attached to this sleeve tie around the
feed of the paintball gun, to prevent the sleeve itself from being fired
off. Barrel socks are considered superior to barrel plugs.
Barrel porting: n. A ported barrel has holes (ports) drilled through its walls
for part of its length. Porting serves to quiet the paintgun by venting gas
to the sides of the barrel, reducing the explosiveness (and noisiness) of
the exhaust from the muzzle. Porting is also thought to reduce turbulence
around the ball as it leaves the barrel and thus lead to marginally better
accuracy. Porting reduces the effective length of the barrel.
Barrel rifling: n. Sometimes barrel porting is called barrel rifling, but
this is a misnomer. Rifling actually refers to spiral grooves cut on the
inside of a barrel intended to make the paintball (or any projectile) spin
in flight. This spinning is supposed to stabilize the projectile and lead
to much improved accuracy. While this works well with bullets, it is generally
regarded as a failure with paintballs. The problem is that the liquid filling
of a paintball will not spin in a stable manner. Occasionally rumors surface
regarding paintballs that can be reliable spun.
Barrel tag: n. During recball or other informal games a player can be eliminated
by sneaking close enough to touch him with the barrel of your paintgun. In
theory this spares that player the pain of a close range hit. This is the
only acceptable way to touch another player in a paintball game, and many
fields even prohibit barrel tags. Any other touching can technically be considered
assault and thus criminal. The no-touch rule is intended to prevent fighting,
and is taken very seriously.
Barrel tap: n. Synonym of barrel tag.
Beavertail: n. A metal shroud designed to encase the protruding bolt to
keep it from striking the user when the bolt fires and retracts. Designed
specifically for rear cocking paintball guns.
Bleed Valve: n. A valve that allows the compressed gas in a paintgun and
remote to be discharged before disconnecting the gun from it's propellant
source.
Blind firing: v. (slang.)- To shoot over the tops or sides of a bunker by
sticking the gun over or around a corner without aiming. Commonly a mistake
made by newer players. It is also usually considered a safety hazard and
is thus banned on most fields.
Bolt: n. The internal part of a paintgun that pushes the paintball into
the barrel after it has been fed through the breech. The bolt also actually
brings the propellant (gas) into contact with the paintball. In both closed
and open bolt guns the bolt is brought to rest behind the paintball and gas
flows through the bolt to push the ball through the barrel.
Bonus ball: 1. v. (slang) To overshoot someone. This term is also commonly
used in two very specific circumstances. The first is purposefully overshooting
someone, either maliciously because you dislike them or think it is funny,
or vindictively in retribution for perceived cheating. The theory on the
latter is that the player cannot effectively wipe multiple hits as easily
as a single hit. The second circumstance is accidentally shooting an eliminated
player who happens to cross your line of fire while he is exiting the field.
2. n. Also used to describe the actual extra paintball or paintball hits
when someone has been bonus balled.
Bore: n. The diameter of your barrel and the circumference of your paint
Bottle: n. A synonym of tank, used more commonly in Europe.
Bottom Line: n. An air fitting that moves the paintgun's gas input to the
bottom of the grip frame.
Bounce: n. When a paintball bounces off after striking a player, as opposed
to breaking. A hit that bounces does not count, unless certain special rules
apply, and the player is not eliminated.
BPS: n. Balls per second. A unit of measurement to describe how fast a paintgun
fires or how fast a hopper feeds, and indicates the number of paintballs
fired or fed in one second.
Break: 1. n. When a paintball breaks upon impacting a player, thus eliminating
him. Contrast with bounce. 2. n. A malfunction wherein a paintball splatters
inside the barrel or in the breech. Usually accuracy suffers after a break.
3. n. The initial few seconds right after the whistle blows to start a game.
Breech: n. The opening in the side of a paintgun through which the paintballs
feed. Generally, a hopper attaches to the breech via a feed neck and occasionally
an elbow..
Bunker: 1. n. Any man-made object that is used as cover during a paintball
game. A bunker can be a log pile, a wall, a pallet or spool, an inflatable
obstacle, a 55-gallon drum, and so on. Of note, trees are not bunkers. 2.
v. (slang) To rush around the sides or over another players bunker and fire
upon them at close range.
Burst disk: n. A part of the valve assembly at the top of a CO2 tank, the
burst disk ruptures when the pressure inside the tank exceeds the container’s
pressure rating. The gas in the tank is then vented safely.
Butt Plate: A device that attaches to the rear of an air tank, making firing
the paintgun more comfortable.
BYOP: bring your own paint (as opposed to being able to, or having to, buy
paint at the field).