MeatMissile
WKR
I’ll start off with this: I shoot suppressed at work. It’s at the detriment of velocity and adds weight and length to my 11.5 AR. But, almost all of the situations I’d have to use this rifle would be indoors and/or very short ranges. I’m simply not going to be in a situation where I can identify deadly threats at 300 yards (or even 100 yards) with a 0x optic. Its not exactly “quiet” but makes life more bearable for those around me when firing hundreds of rounds in a day.
That said....
I can’t see a scenario where I’d want/need this on a big game rifle. I’ve never hunted anywhere where I could shoot multiple big game animals in one spot, so hiding the signature of my rifle means little. I prefer taking advantage of the terminal performance gained by a longer barrel (seems like most suppressor-ready rifles are shorter in the barrel). For hunting thick places where I’d use a shorter rifle, I wouldn’t want to add 6 inches and a half pound on the end of the gun.
Does the decrease in sound/signature make up for the lost velocity, increased weight, increased length, and change in balance?
I can totally see the benefit while varmint hunting where there is a high volume of shooting. Maybe even while predator hunting where doubles aren’t uncommon.
That said....
I can’t see a scenario where I’d want/need this on a big game rifle. I’ve never hunted anywhere where I could shoot multiple big game animals in one spot, so hiding the signature of my rifle means little. I prefer taking advantage of the terminal performance gained by a longer barrel (seems like most suppressor-ready rifles are shorter in the barrel). For hunting thick places where I’d use a shorter rifle, I wouldn’t want to add 6 inches and a half pound on the end of the gun.
Does the decrease in sound/signature make up for the lost velocity, increased weight, increased length, and change in balance?
I can totally see the benefit while varmint hunting where there is a high volume of shooting. Maybe even while predator hunting where doubles aren’t uncommon.