Scythe-Ti recoil reduction

Sevens

WKR
Joined
Apr 14, 2020
Location
Dallas, TX
Can’t find an answer for this, but would a Scythe-Ti with its 1.73” diameter tube reduce recoil better than a similarly sized 1.5” diameter can (Enticer-STi, Harvester EVO, etc.)

Interested in the Scythe Ti if it will reduce recoil more than my Harvester EVO. The weight savings is a plus, but not worth getting if minimal recoil reduction difference. Happy with sound suppression on the EVO.
 
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I don't see a lot of difference between my longer thinner cans and my shorter thicker ones when it comes to recoil reduction. That being said, I haven't tried them back to back on the same gun as my cans tend to ride on the same rig for life.
 
Can’t find an answer for this, but would a Scythe-Ti with its 1.73” diameter tube reduce recoil better than a similarly sized 1.5” diameter can (Enticer-STi, Harvester EVO, etc.)

Interested in the Scythe Ti if it will reduce recoil more than my Harvester EVO. The weight savings is a plus, but not worth getting if minimal recoil reduction difference. Happy with sound suppression on the EVO.
I have one in jail but haven’t shot it.

I do think it will. But not because of its width. Its mini brake will help. I think this because it does on the omega 30 with its brake (have shot). It’s a little brake with min added weight but will help.

At twice the price of the evo though…..that is a personal choice.
 
Bumping this. Been wondering if the anchor brake from the omega would be a useful addition to this in situations where recoil reduction is at a premium like in comps. It seems like when burning a lot of powder the answer is yes and when burning 30-42 grains like lots of comp guns not so much. The posted recoil reduction numbers on the new tbacs seem to indicate that as well.
 
I have no experience with an evo. But I do have 2 omega 300s both with flush end caps. I shot a 7.8lb 300wsm with a scythe that made me instantly buy one. Recoil reduction wasn’t really a focus point. It was more the OAL and the weight, doing a great job with sound reduction. My scythe will also have flush end caps, much like my omegas making it lighter and shorter. I don’t think recoil reduction will be drastically different but the evo should buck a little more energy.
 
Can’t find an answer for this, but would a Scythe-Ti with its 1.73” diameter tube reduce recoil better than a similarly sized 1.5” diameter can (Enticer-STi, Harvester EVO, etc.)

Interested in the Scythe Ti if it will reduce recoil more than my Harvester EVO. The weight savings is a plus, but not worth getting if minimal recoil reduction difference. Happy with sound suppression on the EVO.
I have the OG harvester and the Scythe.

I have shot both on a 6.5 and .308 and can’t tell a difference recoil wise.
 
I’m not sure I agree with the above statement completely.

A suppressor does tame recoil a bit IMO but agree that intended purpose should be noise reduction….that said they are still “loud” too.

A good can will do both but primarily sound. It won’t do anything near as good as your multiport brake on a big cartridge like that. You’ll miss your brake.

You can get the omega 300 brake and add it to the scythe. It still won’t be as good though. If I were to completely guess I’d be impressed if you approach half as effective as that brake. But it will “feel” better because the sound of a big rifle like that IMO contributes to the unpleasant shot experience. That’s reduced obviously.
 
I have the OG harvester and the Scythe.

I have shot both on a 6.5 and .308 and can’t tell a difference recoil wise.
Have the Harvester Evo & a Scythe. Felt both do a great job on recoil. But it was on two different rifles. 6 ARC and 6.5 Grendel. I’m referring to subjective felt recoil.

I’d guess some of that is the reduced muzzle blast and possibly a more extended recoil pulse/velocity when suppressed. The Sythe is a sweet unit, but 2.5x the cost of an Evo, $1,000 vs $400 (on a close out sale I presume), makes one think. Considering another EVO at that price.
 
You're missing the point of a suppressor completely.
Not really. Perhaps your missing the point of keeping a precise rifle precise and utilizing it with heavy for caliber bullets. Ill take precision with ear plugs and a 5 port brake that i spot impacts before not wearing earplugs with a $1200 device that handicaps my rifle. Cutting barrels on magnums to have a suppressor carry well in hand with loss of velocity defeats purpose of a long range magnum let alone have significant more recoil. To each there own. With saying that if it has good recoil reduction id spin a suppressor on all day.
 
Perhaps your missing the point of keeping a precise rifle precise and utilizing it with heavy for caliber bullets. Ill take precision with ear plugs and a 5 port brake that i spot impacts before not wearing earplugs with a $1200 device that handicaps my rifle.
A different perspective. While a can won’t reduce recoil as much as a big brake the pressure and concussion on the shooter is much less and I’ve found that newer shooters do better with the can than they do with a big brake. If you ask which one they like better it’ll be the can every time. I kind of feel the same. I’ve shot so long that I’m used to the noise and concussion but I think I’ll say it’s just overall better shooting with the can. I think even if you think you’re immune to the noise, shock/concussion you’re still reacting to it more with the brake than a can. Anyway something to think about.
 
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