PaintballX3 Magazine Paintball X3 Magazine March 2014 | Page 61

61 Luxe OLED include Konstantin Federov, Thomas Taylor, Tim Montressor, Ryan Moorhead, Nick Slowiak and Corey Field, and if it’s good enough for them, there can’t be too many people in the world that the Luxe OLED can’t help get from one end of the field to the other. Standard features of the Luxe OLED are plentiful, as they should be for a marker costing on the north side of $1,500. A nice, new zippered hard case protects every new Luxe OLED. Anti-chop eyes protected by magnetic eye covers all but prevent chopped paintballs, a low profile lever-clamping feed neck securely grips every high-end hopper on the current market and is easily adjusted via a thumb screw and the entire spool valve drive core of the marker can be instantaneously removed for cleaning or maintenance by simply lifting up on the back cover and pulling rearward. A smooth, swooping, adjustable double trigger allows for high semiautomatic rates of fire, though practically every firing mode known to man is available on the marker’s board, which still communicates to its user audibly via a speaker housed in the marker’s grip. No external air hoses exist on the Luxe OLED, as all air is moved internally from the simple on/off bottle adapter to the marker’s regulator for firing. A rechargeable lithium polymer battery is used to power the Luxe’s electronics and the marker is delivered with a multi-pie