Paintball Magazine, July 2020 July 2020 | Page 67

Getting past all the switcheroo the Valken Switch Loader brings to the table, there are other features offered by the VSL. A single button controls on/off function of the loader and it offers a nice tactile feel even with gloves on, and it’s easily located at the rear of the loader’s lower tray. The loader is well-made and durable with a solid, thick feed neck unlikely to sheer off or break, and the VSL comes apart to its basic components completely without tools making cleaning and maintenance, even in the pits between points if necessary, simple and fast. Three AA batteries run the VSL and they’re quick and easy to install and change (for the fifteenth time) without tools. The loader’s construction is such that the whole “fly apart while diving into the snake” thing isn’t likely to happen so long as the owner puts the thing together properly, though it could happen to any loader during a rough landing. Capacity of the Valken VSL loader sits at just under 200 rounds as it comes out of the box. Add a solid fifty to that with the included Extender, which does add a little height to the finished product but not disgustingly so. Thanks to the loader’s light weight, a scant 1.2 pounds with batteries installed, even with the extender added and a hopper full of paintballs, even featherweight tournament guns don’t feel terribly top-heavy or unbalanced. As advertised, installing the Valken speed feed took only moments and required twisting the flip lid out and snapping the speed feed into place. Even with a loader full of .68 caliber paintballs and the extender, flipping the gun upside and giving a good shake saw no paint spilled, though the fingers may allow a few .50 caliber paintballs to spill out should the user actually use it for low impact paintball. On a gun and firing, the Valken VSL loader kept up well on both mechanical markers and high-end electronic models. On mechanical paintball guns without eyes to aid in preventing chops, consistently high rates of fire around the ten paintballs per second mark can only be maintained if the loader diligently keeps paintballs flowing into the breech and ready to fire. No chops or breaks were encountered while shooting with both an Inception Ripper Autococker and an upgraded Eclipse EMek. www.paintball.media 067