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Post by jack603 on Sept 15, 2013 13:54:16 GMT -5
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Salem
New Member
Posts: 169
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Post by Salem on Sept 15, 2013 14:11:20 GMT -5
I would say get the gr15, and put a couple upgrades in it. i know a lot of people that have or have previously owned it and said it was welk worth it
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Post by Bulletproof on Sept 15, 2013 14:47:51 GMT -5
Depending on what the broken teeth did (messed up piston, other gears, etc.) it may or may not be worth it. But if you have no technical experience, don't bother. Generally, electric blowback systems aren't very reliable and don't give as good as an effect as a gas blow back. But if I had to chose one out of the ones you listed, I'd say the G&G. G&G is highly recommended here and I wouldn't doubt their opinions.
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Post by jack603 on Sept 15, 2013 14:54:16 GMT -5
Depending on what the broken teeth did (messed up piston, other gears, etc.) it may or may not be worth it. But if you have no technical experience, don't bother. Generally, electric blowback systems aren't very reliable and don't give as good as an effect as a gas blow back. But if I had to chose one out of the ones you listed, I'd say the G&G. G&G is highly recommended here and I wouldn't doubt their opinions. Do you have a different suggestion for a gun?
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Post by Bubba on Sept 15, 2013 15:05:35 GMT -5
Get a g&g combat machine, without the electric blowback. Just as reliable if not more reliable than the blowback version. Electric blowback doesn't do anything other than have a piece of tin making an annoying noise everytime you shoot the gun.
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Post by jack603 on Sept 15, 2013 15:21:26 GMT -5
Get a g&g combat machine, without the electric blowback. Just as reliable if not more reliable than the blowback version. Electric blowback doesn't do anything other than have a piece of tin making an annoying noise everytime you shoot the gun. Would you recommend getting one with the polymer RIS?
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Post by Bubba on Sept 15, 2013 18:00:13 GMT -5
That's up to. I was only talking about internals. Externals is personal, I don't know what you like in a gun. If you want the ris go for it.
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Simon
New Member
Posts: 379
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Post by Simon on Sept 15, 2013 18:47:10 GMT -5
If you don't like the externals and have the money to blow then just get a new one. Or, if you have any tech experience or know anybody who does then just replace the parts, it will probably be the cheapest option depending on the damage.
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Post by MayhemXXXFrosty (AndrewMp5k) on Sept 16, 2013 1:12:38 GMT -5
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Post by voodoo on Sept 16, 2013 7:13:13 GMT -5
I would say if you don't have the know how to fix it, go with the G&G combat machine. I have two of them and they perform like champs! My field rifle shoots a consistent 347. And mine are both the bare bones basic CM.
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Post by Puma1 on Sept 16, 2013 9:47:28 GMT -5
Also, the g&g polymer is about 5x tougher than JG's. You won't be disappointed by the entire CM line.
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Post by Dallas on Sept 16, 2013 19:32:08 GMT -5
Go for the FMG4. It's a nice gun all around and even has a functioning bolt catch thrown in there. I'd look at the other ones they have, but if these are your only options, though, I'd jump on that one you listed ASAP.
[Edit] Boom, 1001 posts. Watchagonnadoaboutit?
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Post by ~Ranger~ on Oct 5, 2013 3:16:57 GMT -5
I think it would be much cheaper to just replace the internals that broke. Unless your going for uber speed, or uber torque. Gears arent all that expensive if your just going to stick around the stock fps etc. A new rifle will cost $150+ and gears will cost $40-$50? if you get decent ones. Buy second hand gears even. Or, if your not very tech savy, buy a drop in gearbox for $60 roughly.
That still saves one heck of a lot of cash buddy.
As for E1/Jg guns.. They can very easily last years and years! I dont care what some might say about JG/E1. I build my son a Stubby M4 in 2008, and its been kicking ass ever since! As he gets older and bigger, I upgrade the externals. Now his M4 is full size, shoots freaking great, and all stock parts!
Its all about how you treat it. I shimmed the gears perfectly, motor it set perfectly, I clean the bucking and inner barrel to avoid jams, and I taught him what to do if there were to be a jam. "Dont keep holding the trigger" Somethings gonna give.
Of course its 110% your choice bro, just throwing out my 2 cents. But I'm certain that if you take care of it, and take some time to work on it correctly, it will last a very very long time.
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Post by Coldwave on Oct 5, 2013 21:38:20 GMT -5
What ranger said. Just get a drop in gearbox there are plenty of options, and it isn't rocket science to drop them in. Whole hell of a lot cheaper too.
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