( looking some of Surefire not sure to get it ) please let me know.
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Thanks For the info Hopefully ill get some good info on the topic :)carlson1 wrote:There are a lot of members that are "suppressor expert", but I am not one of them. I only have one suppressor and it is from YHM. I do wish I would have spent a couple of extra hundred dollars and bought the titanium model because of the weight. Mine can get a little heavy.
Really only an issue if you can’t service the suppressor yourself because of the crud buildup. If the suppressor is user-serviceable, it shouldn’t make a difference.MaduroBU wrote:Get a separate rimfire can if. You'll be shooting .22 LR or only shoot jacketed rimfire like 17 hmr or .22wmr. Don't put .22 lr through a center fire rifle can.
Thanks for the tip! something to consider based on the very appealing price. Can we prep it (measure, cut it, etc.) and not assemble it first while one waits for the stamp's approval or is it best to get the stamp before buying the parts? TIA.The Annoyed Man wrote:You can build one on a Form 1, completely legally, for a third to a quarter of the retail price of buying one. I own three. One is a commercial AAC can in .308 caliber, one is a home built .308 caliber can, and one is a commercial Rugged Obsidian pistol can.
My advice is to always go over-bore. You can suppress a 5.56 weapon with a .308 can even quieter than a 5.56 can for the same weapon, but you can’t suppress a .308 weapon with a 5.56 can. External diameter for either can will be roughly the same - give or take maybe .1”.
To put home-built prices into comparison with commercial prices:
My all steel AAC 762-SDN-6 cost me $830 retail.
My aluminum / steel Rugged Obsidian45 pistol can (which will also work on 9mm even more quietly) cost me $850 retail.
My titanium / steel baffles home-built .308 can cost me about $240 in parts.
If you built your own AR, that is more complicated than building your own can. Search the forum for AndyC’s thread on “suppressor build” for more details, but it is just silly how simple it is.
You can buy parts and do anything you want EXCEPT drill out the baffles or the end cap. You can form them, but if you drill those, you are in possession of a silencer, even if you have not assembled the parts. You’ll have to have the outer tube engraved with the relevant information, such as your name (or your trust name), the model# you designate for it, the serial# you designate for it, etc. But until you drill out the baffles and the endcap, it’s just a solvent trap....or something like that. Once you’ve got your tax stamp back from ATF, you can go ahead and assemble everything into a working suppressor. Assembly takes about 30 seconds. You’ll probably want to cerakote it. My son and I just used the spray on Cerakote on the ones we built. I think AndyC just used some kind of hi-temp Krylon paint or something like it.superstar wrote:Thanks for the tip! something to consider based on the very appealing price. Can we prep it (measure, cut it, etc.) and not assemble it first while one waits for the stamp's approval or is it best to get the stamp before buying the parts? TIA.The Annoyed Man wrote:You can build one on a Form 1, completely legally, for a third to a quarter of the retail price of buying one. I own three. One is a commercial AAC can in .308 caliber, one is a home built .308 caliber can, and one is a commercial Rugged Obsidian pistol can.
My advice is to always go over-bore. You can suppress a 5.56 weapon with a .308 can even quieter than a 5.56 can for the same weapon, but you can’t suppress a .308 weapon with a 5.56 can. External diameter for either can will be roughly the same - give or take maybe .1”.
To put home-built prices into comparison with commercial prices:
My all steel AAC 762-SDN-6 cost me $830 retail.
My aluminum / steel Rugged Obsidian45 pistol can (which will also work on 9mm even more quietly) cost me $850 retail.
My titanium / steel baffles home-built .308 can cost me about $240 in parts.
If you built your own AR, that is more complicated than building your own can. Search the forum for AndyC’s thread on “suppressor build” for more details, but it is just silly how simple it is.
That's true, but a number of cans are made sealed these days. The powder and lead residue that a .22, or really any cast lead bullet, leaves inside a can is far worse than a jacketed bullet. Even if taking it apart to clean it is an option, make sure that it's worth the hassle.The Annoyed Man wrote:Really only an issue if you can’t service the suppressor yourself because of the crud buildup. If the suppressor is user-serviceable, it shouldn’t make a difference.MaduroBU wrote:Get a separate rimfire can if. You'll be shooting .22 LR or only shoot jacketed rimfire like 17 hmr or .22wmr. Don't put .22 lr through a center fire rifle can.
I’ve never had a problem with mine with 22 or anything else. I pull it apart and throw the baffle into the ultrasonic.MaduroBU wrote:That's true, but a number of cans are made sealed these days. The powder and lead residue that a .22, or really any cast lead bullet, leaves inside a can is far worse than a jacketed bullet. Even if taking it apart to clean it is an option, make sure that it's worth the hassle.The Annoyed Man wrote:Really only an issue if you can’t service the suppressor yourself because of the crud buildup. If the suppressor is user-serviceable, it shouldn’t make a difference.MaduroBU wrote:Get a separate rimfire can if. You'll be shooting .22 LR or only shoot jacketed rimfire like 17 hmr or .22wmr. Don't put .22 lr through a center fire rifle can.
If you do opt to run cast bullets or .22 LR through a can, put silver anti seize on the disassembly threads first. Also, break the seal on the disassembly threads every 20 rounds or so (just loosen a turn and then tighten it back up). I once had to send a .22 can back to Gemtech and it took THEM a month to loosen it.... After it sat in kroil in my safe for 3 months just prior. It was that stuck after 150 rounds.