Chris in TN
WKR
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2025
- Messages
- 1,197
*nods massively*The masses buy the cheapest thing they can get that satisfies their need. That's why everything is made overseas and Walmart is what it is. Cheap suppressors will fly off the shelf.
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*nods massively*The masses buy the cheapest thing they can get that satisfies their need. That's why everything is made overseas and Walmart is what it is. Cheap suppressors will fly off the shelf.
You'll love that a-10With my first can sitting in jail (AB A-10) and a B&T Tiger 22 ordered, these cheaper alloy/steel cans certainly put the 'a can for every rifle' possibility on the table for more of us.
Brilliant move licensing (?) European tech.
Yeah, my first suppressors were Form 1s that I made off plans from a buddy. They worked well for what they were but they do not hold up against proper machine shop suppressors for weight and suppresson.That's what has always chapped me about the pricing. Not that long ago folks were Form 1ing solvent traps that had about five dollars worth of raw materials in them.
I spent most of my life - 30+ years as a regular shooter - without a suppressor.With a little work you could build your own suppressor with a D cell maglite.
NRA had an article about the Lyman suppressor and what caught my eye was the price. I looked at their website but no prices were listed just the basic specs and nothing on the db reduction
I’ve wondered about this.the difference between 'no can' and 'any can' is a continental divide IMO.
I have two YHM centerfire cans. They're well made, decently light and decently quiet, though neither are even close to 'cutting edge'. I ended up around $800 in each of them including taxes/fees and I'd buy them both again tomorrow and still be happy with them. No, they're nowhere near the options we have now, but again, any can vs no can.....I'll take 'any can' all day long. My two younger children simply would not be shooters/hunters at all, without suppressors. My oldest probably would but doesn't enjoy it as much. I gave her the option to hike around the CO mountains last fall without a can, to save 12 ounces of precious weight, and she said 'no way'.I’ve wondered about this.
The only cans I’ve been around have been 22LR shooting SV ammo.
Most of those are movie quiet (to me).
I was concerned that it may be a waste to spend $200-$300 on a can and not notice a difference.
Sounds like it might be worth looking into.
The issue with AB’s cans is they are big, bulky, and look like a dildo- that’s why they did not massively affect any other company.
Selling points to some! At least they embrace it. "Ribbed for ear pleasure."
My Raptor 10 was my first can years ago when no one knew about them. It's solid as hell and has never let me down. My very own Big Black Can.
Completely agree that 3d printing is the future from a design and manufacturing standpoint. You can achieve flow paths on a large scale that are plain unobtainable with traditional manufacturing. A handful of nice 3d printed cans and another handful of cheapies for the rest of the stable would work very nicely.
Anyone compared long range accuracy between the 2 .OTB and regular? I like the length reduction for sure.