A whole new generation of overkill. |
Size compared to a Vulcan, it's rather wide. |
The tripod fits on the Vulcan and vice versa. |
Jam door detail. |
Honestly I felt a bit intimidated by the sheer size of this blaster on the difficulty of opening it. But in all honesty it's really quite easy, especially compared to the Vulcan with it's 40 million screws and enough moving parts to loose in a heartbeat. To start you want to remove the left handle held in by only two screws.
At the front when you flip the blaster over there should be a plate held in by five screws that just comes right off. There's then two screws on the front of the tactical rail that need to be removed so the top half of the shell can be removed. From there you can remove the barrels and actually uncrew the rest of the blaster.
These internals work similarly to a Rapidstrike but there are two on each side and they operate in intervals. When one barrel fires the other retracts back and vice versa. I'd imagine most voltage mods would work fairly normally in this thing and there's plenty of room for batteries of your own choosing when the tray is removed. Be warned though, for some odd reason my blaster's pusher mechanism began struggling to feed darts after I had opened this thing and I couldn't diagnose the problem. Hopefully this is just a fault with mine but I'll be exchanging it for a new one so it shouldn't be much of a problem.
Video Coming Soon
So the Rhino-Fire is something else, it's intimidation factor alone is enough to scare the pants off some people. The $100 price tag is justifiable as I didn't really see much that made it completely stand out from smaller automatic blasters like the Rapidstrike. I mean honestly, why would you want to carry around a hulking anti aircraft gun when you can just use a smaller assault rifle with just as much effectiveness? The Rhino-Fire deserves a solid 8 out of 10 because it's a great blaster, it's just not very practical. But still, the principal of this blaster is that it's a heavy weapon. It wasn't built with precision and stealth in mind, oh no far from it. It was built to run into a room Rambo style, firing from the hip and screaming bloody murder; overkill. So with that, you can throw all reason out the door and get a Rhino-Fire by your side, it's badass, it's a monster, it's... too much.
The Verdict
Class- Heavy Machine Gun
Range- Excellent, about 65 to 70 feet.
Size- Slightly shorter in length as a Vulcan but much wider.
Reliability- Jams are an obvious possibility. Hopefully my issue is an odd case.
Ammo- 50 Elite Darts
Modding- Voltage mods are about as much you can do.
Value- At $100, it stupid expensive although it's very powerful. Wait for a sale, and still get your wallet ready.
Value- At $100, it stupid expensive although it's very powerful. Wait for a sale, and still get your wallet ready.
Is It Better Than?
Vulcan- Yes, the Vulcan may be big but it's performance is underwhelming. It holds half as much ammo as the Rhino-Fire and it doesn't fire anywhere near as far. Price is probably the only swaying factor between these two.
Rapidstrike- Depends, the Rapidstrike is a far more compact weapon than the Rhino-Fire but it bolster's the same amount of effectiveness, possibly more in some situations. Its of a matter of preference, practicality or overkill.
Stampede- Yes, the Stampede is basically the product of taking a Vulcan, shrinking it down into a more rifle like package and making it clip fed. While it is more manageable than the Rhino-Fire it lacks the firepower. It has a fair amount of mod potential through.
You got one, you even had time to take it apart already... Awesome!
ReplyDeleteYeah I already returned it as it began screwing up after I opened it. I'm getting a new one once they get back in stock but for now I'm glad I got 50 free darts out of the deal.
DeleteHey can you remove only 1 barrel and make the rhino fire a artillery gun
ReplyDelete