Jump to content


Photo

First home made tips

For the noobs who need help

3 replies to this topic

#1 232524z

232524z

    Member

  • Members
  • 11 posts

Posted 20 April 2014 - 08:35 AM

For any one who is planing on building their first home made, it will most likely cost about 50-60$. If you want it to work well, then I recommend using TheNerfOmania's Snapbow (a gun with a cloths pin trigger) tutorial. That was what I used for my first home made, and it worked amazingly well, getting a good 70 feet with stock darts. I just completed it a week ago, and have used it in a war. I have not yet tried it with stefans (home made darts), but I am guessing that it will reach or pass 100 feet. I highly recommend this tutorial, I know that it is long, but you get to see every thing that he does. I hope that this helps, and good luck!
TheNerfOmania's Tutorial/Thread

Edited by 232524z, 20 April 2014 - 07:53 PM.

  • 0

#2 Birch

Birch

    Member

  • Members
  • 181 posts

Posted 20 April 2014 - 05:25 PM

These types of threads aren't normally allowed, just saying.

By the way all of this information has already been posted, so if people are looking for it they can find it.

Also, you should at least credit the creators of their respective threads/videos.
  • 0

It's like a Hurricane ate a Tornado and shat out a Monsoon!!


#3 Daniel Beaver

Daniel Beaver

    HQRSE CQCK

  • Moderators
  • 2,096 posts

Posted 20 April 2014 - 06:30 PM

These links already exist in Nerfomania's writeup.
  • 0

#4 Zorns Lemma

Zorns Lemma

    Sir Scrt

  • Moderators
  • 1,277 posts

Posted 20 April 2014 - 09:20 PM

Good try in your post, but the negative response you've received here is because NerfHaven strives to be a place where each post is as meaningful as possible, even to the extend of having less activity as long as the quality is higher. Check out the recommendations in the New Members Guide.

Good luck with your membership here.
  • 0
"In short, the same knowledge that underlies the ability to produce correct judgement is also the knowledge that underlies the ability to recognize correct judgement. To lack the former is to be deficient in the latter."
Kruger and Dunning (1999)


0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users