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*[http://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/gadgets/tankball-like-paintball-but-in-tanks-209591.php/ Gizmodo article]
*[http://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/gadgets/tankball-like-paintball-but-in-tanks-209591.php/ Gizmodo article]
*[http://www.funtrak.co.uk/ www.funtrak.co.uk]
*[http://www.funtrak.co.uk/ www.funtrak.co.uk]
*[http://www.thescenarioplayer.com/wpav.htm/ Walking Paintball Armored Vehicles]
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[[Category:Paintball]]
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Revision as of 18:07, 7 February 2008

Paintball tanks are mechanized vehicles used in various types of the sport of paintball, usually with the intent of military simulation. Paintball tanks are commonly used for woodsball and scenario paintball games. These props are often commonly referred to as 'Paintball Armored Vehicles' (PAV), or simply 'mechs'.

While there are many different appearances of PAV's, most of them will fall into one of three major categories. The first is the 'heavy tanks', which are automobile-based machines (or on rare occasions,a decommissioned military armored vehicle) which are typically the largest and heaviest tanks. 'Medium tanks', the second category, are typically built on smaller vehicles, such as a golf cart, or an ATV. There is a third category which contains what might be called light tanks, but these tend to be little more than glorified personal armor.

General

Armament

Paintball tanks may be armed with anything from a single paintball marker to many paintball markers, even to carbon dioxide-powered cannons, usually grenade launchers but sometimes even rocket launchers.

Markers used are usually trained upon the players of the opposing team, while the cannons are used primarily against the paintball tanks of the opposing team. The markers can pretty much be any marker available. The air cannons on the other hand can be somewhat more ambiguous.

Many different types of projectiles have been used over the years under many various circumstances. In the early years of paintball tanks the 'tank cannon' was simply a PVC cannon that shot a load of paintballs that were typically a special color to indicate they were a cannon load. These days the use of such paintball loads has declined and Nerf Pocket Rockets seem to be the most common projectile used for tank cannons. These Nerf cannons though are hardly the only version of tanks' main cannons out there. Most field owners and scenario game producers will only allow paintball or Nerf firing cannons.

An illustrative example of the variety tank cannons' ammunition is that even Hostess Twinkies have been used for the purpose. Relatively new to paintball tanks is the formal adoption in some locations of 'marker based' cannons. This is a paintball marker that uses a special color paint like the older paintball load cannons but unlike their older cousins these are nothing more than a regular paintball marker that only shoots a single paintball at a time. Due to their very nature these newer marker based cannons may be considered to be the safest form of tank cannon available.

Rules and Game Involvement

Paintball tanks usually have special rules to adhere to for each event. These rules change from field to field and from scenario producer to scenario producer. For example some places will not allow PUG style tanks and some will not allow the automotive heavy tanks. Speed limit rules are generally considered among the more important rules for paintball tanks, especially the heavy tanks. The variations of rules that concern paintball tanks is really only limited to the number of fields out there that use paintball tanks.

Heavy tanks

File:IMG 1126.JPG
A heavy tank at Oklahoma DDAY. It measures 12 feet wide, 9 feet high and 22 feet long (not counting the barrel).

Heavy tanks are relatively rarer than tanks of the other two brackets. This is due to the very high degree of involvement in their construction, maintenance, et cetera. These tanks are usually owned by one or more devoted individuals. They put a lot of time, money and effort into them and take pride in their creations.

Heavy tanks are often built upon a truck chassis, with a smaller number built with a custom chassis. Common construction materials consist of plywood, with some using sheet metal for an outer shell.

Medium tanks

File:SSA-2002-Jumbo-0024.jpg
A medium tank.

Of the three tanks a player may encounter on the field the medium tank is probably the most common. Being built on anything that moves it is not uncommon to see golf carts, ride on lawn mowers (even professional landscaping mowers), ATVs (of all types from the typical four wheeler to the rarer multi wheel 'Argo style' vehicles), go-karts, wheel chairs and occasionally a true tracked vehicle such as a Cushman trackster. Some highly skilled individuals have gone as far as completely building their paintball vehicle from scratch.

Light tank

File:OA BotB 2005 German-PUG 0023.jpg
A Funtrak 'Paintball Panzer'(top) A 'PUG' light tank (bottom)

Despite their small stature and light armament, the light tank section of the paintball tank family is quite possibly the closest to their real life counter parts when it comes to the way they are used tactically and strategically in paintball battles. This is due to the fact that, like real tanks, Panzer Ultraleicht Gepacks (super light tanks, or PUGs) can usually go anywhere on the field since they do not have to worry about running over paintball players hiding under leaves the way a medium—or even more importantly, a heavy tank—needs to worry.

Rules

Due to the risk of death or injury to people or property, extreme caution and care must be taken while using the tank. So every tank in the field must follow these rules.

Note: these rules are meant to serve as a general guideline, and may differ depending on where you play.

1. tanks must be accompanied by a referee or a neutral "tank-walker".
2. some fields require a remote ignition cutoff switch in case of emergency, via remote control
3. ref must have walkie talkie communication at least with tank
4. tanks can shoot guns in semi auto mode only with one shot per trigger pull
5. tanks may travel no faster than walking speed
6. tank owner and operator must have liability insurance of at least $300,000 and name the field owner and promoter as additional insured one week prior to event. (can be purchased from insurance agent for off road use only)
7.It is HIGHLY reccomended that any air cannon have a saftey pop valve.

No direct-fire, multi-projectile fire from tank.
1. "buckshot" is not allowed on NPA insured fields as the danger of knocking off a mask is too high. 2. Indirect-fire mortars avoid the risk of oversaturating a small area with simultaneously-impacting paintballs and thus do not present the same risk as "buckshot"

LAW rockets or similar toys. 1. rockets or similar toys may be used against buildings or tanks only, only if no human beings are around. They can be shot at the building to destroy but not through windows to eliminate players. At no time may one of these be pointed and fired towards players. Referee control is mandatory over players with these items.

Tankball

Tankball is a variation of Paintball in which players drive modified full size tanks and fire large paintball pellets at another tank. Each battle pits two tanks against one another, and each tank can contain up to three teammates.

Currently there is only one place the game is available, Leicestershire in England.

Tankball is a more expensive game than Paintball, and far less common.