GATE PULSAR D2 and TITAN II Bluetooth(R)
Are you looking for the most precise, stable and technologically advanced HPA system on the market? Do you want instant trigger response, zero drops in muzzle velocity and a perfectly consistent BB trajectory even at high rate of fire? Then the combination of PULSAR D2 and TITAN II Bluetooth(R) EXPERT is exactly what you are looking for. PULSAR D2 is an evolution of the original PULSAR D, redesigned based on years of real-world player feedback. Thanks to a completely redesigned poppet valve and a larger compression chamber, it delivers an extremely wide power range from approx. 0.5 J up to 3.6 J without the need to change any internal parts. Open-bolt and closed-bolt modes, an innovative BB feeding system and a central nozzle return spring ensure excellent consistency, stable muzzle velocity and flawless operation. Combined with the TITAN II Bluetooth(R) processor unit, you gain absolute control over trigger sensitivity, rate of fire, firing modes and advanced diagnostics. TITAN II Bluetooth(R) is GATE’s most advanced processor unit, designed for V2 gearboxes, suitable not only for AEG but also HPA builds. It features the most precise trigger sensor on the market. Thanks to Bluetooth(R) 5.2, TITAN II connects directly to the GATE Control Station app (download here), allowing full configuration, firmware updates, shot statistics, battery monitoring and more. The system also supports smartwatch integration and the GATE STATUS ecosystem for real-time insight during gameplay.
Installation example of the older PULSAR D with GATE TITAN II in a V2 gearbox (installation principle of PULSAR D2 is nearly identical)
Key features
Dual-solenoid HPA engine:Closed-bolt and open-bolt operation with maximum precision and stability.
Extremely wide power range:From approx. 0.5 J up to 3.6 J without changing the poppet valve.
Central nozzle return spring:Symmetrical nozzle movement, improved feeding reliability and reduced wear.
No mid-cap syndrome:High feeding tolerance and stable FPS even ..








