Paintball use cases

Paintball CO2: Fills, Exchanges, and Solid Info

CO2 still powers a lot of paintball setups: backyard play, loaner fleets, older markers, and certain “it just works” builds. Unfourtunately fill policies vary wildly and people ask the wrong questions, then waste a trip. This page shows what to buy, what to avoid, how fills actually work, and how to find the right kind of CO2 place fast.

Quick start

Pick your lane

  • Need “fills” for paintball tanks? Look for paintball fields/shops or gas places that explicitly do paintball fills.
  • Running CO2 for a shop/field/fleet? You’re likely using a bulk cylinder + fill station setup.
  • Just trying to get on the field tomorrow? Start with places that do fills on-site. Exchange/refill rules are simpler for standard cylinders than paintball bottles.
The #1 time-waster: calling a welding gas place and asking “do you refill CO2?” when what you really need is “do you fill paintball CO2 bottles and do you fill by weight?”.

CO2 vs HPA (quick reality check)

HPA is more consistent and common in modern play, but CO2 is still used. If your marker/setup is CO2-based, this page is for you. If you’re deciding from scratch, you’ll often find more fill access with HPA. Either way, the point here is to avoid bad fills, bad adapters, and “sure we can do that” shops that absolutely cannot.

Recommended setups (paintball CO2)

Three sane paths. Pick one based on what you’re actually doing.

If you’re filling from a bulk cylinder: shops often use cylinders designed to dispense liquid CO2 (dip tube). A lot of “why won’t it fill?” problems come from using the wrong bulk tank setup.

Gear checklist (what matters and what causes dumb failures)

Dial-in (how CO2 filling and performance actually behaves)

What’s “normal” for CO2

  • Temperature matters. CO2 pressure swings with temperature. Cold day = lower pressure = “feels weak.”
  • Rapid firing can chill the system and cause performance drop (shootdown) in CO2 setups.
  • Keep tanks upright in use. Liquid CO2 where it shouldn’t be can cause ugly behavior.
If you’re troubleshooting on-field: let the setup warm back up, slow the firing cadence, and stop chasing the problem with random knob turning.

If you’re filling tanks yourself (bulk + station)

  • Secure the bulk cylinder before you do anything.
  • Ventilation is not optional in a confined area.
  • Fill by weight using a scale (avoid overfills).
  • Expect venting/frost during filling. Aim vents away from people.

If this section sounds “serious,” it’s because it is. A chill hobby becomes a bad day fast when pressurized cylinders are treated like toys.

Troubleshooting (symptom → likely cause → fix)

Symptom Likely cause Fix
“No one will fill my tank” Policy issue, tank condition/date markings, wrong place Call with the script; try paintball fields/shops first; ask about weight fills
Performance drops on cold days CO2 pressure lower in cold temps Keep tank warmer, reduce rapid firing, let system stabilize
Rapid fire causes shootdown CO2 cooling/phase change behavior Slow cadence; allow warm-up; consider different setup if you need high sustained ROF
Frosting / icing during fill Normal CO2 expansion + venting Use gloves/eye protection; aim vents away; don’t touch frosted metal barehanded
Tank feels “overfilled” or vents Overfill / too warm storage after fill Fill by weight; don’t leave in hot car; store upright in stable temps
Hissing/leak at valve Damaged seal/valve area Stop using; do not “tighten until it stops”; get it serviced by someone who actually knows what they’re doing

Refill vs exchange for paintball CO2 (what you’ll actually run into)

Call script (get a real answer in 20 seconds)

Don’t ask “do you refill CO2?” That’s how you get “yeah probably” followed by disappointment. Ask this:

Script: “Hi. Do you do paintball CO2 fills (filling paintball bottles), and do you fill by weight? If yes, what sizes do you fill, what are your hours, and do you have any restrictions on bottle condition?”
  • If they say “we do exchanges only,” ask if that’s for bulk cylinders or just their normal shop cylinders.
  • If they say “we don’t do paintball,” ask if there’s a local field/shop they recommend.
  • If they sound unsure, move on. Confusion + pressurized tanks is not a cute combo.

Safety notes (short, serious, and worth reading)

  • Secure bulk cylinders if you’re filling anything from them.
  • Ventilation matters in enclosed areas where CO2 can accumulate.
  • Aim venting away from people during filling operations.
  • Don’t fill damaged valves or tanks that look tampered with.
  • Don’t store tanks in extreme heat (like baking in a car).
  • Keep tanks upright and stable in transport and storage.

Paintball CO2 FAQ

Paintball CO2 is its own weird little ecosystem. Policies vary a lot, so these answers focus on the stuff that saves you wasted trips.

Do paintball places still fill CO2, or is it all HPA now?
Many fields/shops moved toward HPA (compressed air) because it’s more consistent, but CO2 fills still exist. The key is: don’t assume. Some places do HPA only, some do CO2 only, some do both, and some will fill only certain sizes.
What should I ask so I don’t drive there for nothing?
Ask this exact question:
Script: “Hi. Do you do CO2 fills for paintball tanks? If yes, what sizes do you fill, and do you require the tank to be in date / hydro current?”
That’s it. You’ll get a real answer instead of “uhh… I think so?”
Do gas suppliers fill paintball tanks?
Sometimes, but often they don’t want to deal with small paintball tanks because of adapters, time, liability, or policy. Industrial suppliers are more likely to do exchanges/refills for standard CO2 cylinders (5/10/20 lb), not necessarily on-the-spot paintball fills.
Should I do exchange, refill, or “fills” for paintball?
Paintball usually means fills (topping off your paintball tank), not exchanging a standard cylinder. If you’re building a home fill setup, then you’ll be using a larger CO2 cylinder and you’ll either exchange or refill that cylinder. Quick rule: playing at a field → fills. running a home station → exchange/refill.
Why do some places refuse CO2 fills?
Common reasons: they switched to HPA-only, staff aren’t trained, equipment got removed, insurance/liability concerns, or they only fill during certain hours/events. It’s not personal. It’s just the paintball world being paintball.
What does “hydro” mean and why do shops care?
“Hydro” (hydrostatic test) is a periodic certification test for pressure vessels. Some places won’t fill out-of-date tanks. If you’re trying to refill/exchange a larger cylinder, suppliers may check the date too. If your tank is out of date, expect “no” from the more professional shops.
My CO2 tank “shoots liquid” or gets crazy cold. Is that normal?
CO2 can be stored as liquid in the tank under pressure. Rapid discharge can cause extreme cooling and icing. Keep tanks upright, don’t abuse valves, and don’t run sketchy fittings. If you’re seeing liquid CO2 where you shouldn’t, something about your setup or orientation is wrong.
Can I run CO2 in cold weather?
CO2 performance drops when it’s cold because pressure falls with temperature. That’s one reason many players moved to HPA. If you’re playing in colder weather and consistency matters, you’ll probably want HPA.
What’s the best way to find paintball CO2 near me on this site?
Start with listings filtered specifically for paintball fills:

Find CO2 near you (paintball)

Start with places that explicitly do paintball fills. If you’re running bulk for a station, use refill/exchange filters for the bulk cylinder supply.

If you find a listing that’s wrong or incomplete, send an update. Being accurate is literally the entire point of a locator site.

Next steps

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