Law of diminishing returns - more air pressure more engineering, more expensive materials and more liability for the manufacturers and consumers. Then there’s more noise
I am sure this law applies somewhere with most things, but I am not 100% sure its been determined where that point is with compressed air.
At equal power, higher pressures allow you to in turn run less dwell resulting in reduced muzzle noise, for instance when unregulated, your 860 fps shot at 3000 psi will be much quieter than the 860 fps shot at 2000 psi. However, I am sure your statement has truth to it somewhere along the line, I just don't feel it's written in stone as of yet as to where that line is.
I think the biggest issue with increasing pressure is actuating the valve, but with technology like 'balanced valves' and pilot valves, that isn't as much of a hindrance. Heck at 4,500 psi my pilot valve sees 50 lbs of force holding the pilot valve shut, where as a conventional valve would see 350-400 lbs of holding force, which would be a pain to crack.
Then you have closing force acting on the valve, but that also can be mitigated by valve stem diameters, standard .125" valve stems would see 55 lbs at 4,500 psi, where a .061" stem would see 13.2 lbs, which is far less than the closing force of a .125" at nominal 2,000 psi which is 24.5 lbs.
So ultimately, many variables come into play and I am not bright enough to say where exactly the real diminishing return applies with pressure increase within compressed air.
-Matt
Upvote 0