User's Manual

Marker leaks down the barrel no matter what I do.
This is probably caused by a bad Valve Seal (Cup Seal). Replace this part.
Sometimes you can get this leak to stop by running oil through the marker.
Try this first and then replace the Valve Seal.
I took off the grip frame and now the marker won’t even pump to the
cocking point.
You have the screws that hold the frame on the marker reversed and the rear
screw is protruding into the bottom tube of the marker and stopping the
hammer from re-cocking. Reverse these screws.
I pulled the bolt and replaced it out and now the marker won’t shoot at
all and is very quiet when I pull the trigger.
You have your bolt upside down. Reverse it.
My trigger is fine but when I lean my marker to the left (as I am shooting
it), the trigger either won’t move or gets very sticky.
Adjust the undertravel screw on the frame. Follow the set up instructions
above. This screw stops the cam from being able to slide out of the grip
frame.
I am chopping paint or getting a lot of barrel breaks.
If you are chopping paint, the most common cause of this is that your paint is
too tight for the barrel of your marker. It is not causing your paint to chop it
causing it to break in the barrel. Use a properly sized barrel or properly sized
paint.
Your paint could simply be too brittle. I have found the CCM® markers
tolerate brittle paint very well. Drop a few paintballs on the ground. If they
break very easily this is most likely your culprit. Get a more robust shelled
paint.
Another common cause is that your detents are bad and you are double
feeding paint. Again, you are not chopping paint but causing one ball to hit
the other and break in the barrel. Replace your detents.
If you are indeed chopping paint it is either user error (you are simply
closing the breach on a ball), feed issues (your hopper is not keeping up) or
your paint is horribly out of round and not fitting in the breach. Practice, get a
better feeding hopper, or better paint.