Will three baffles disappoint me?

I was looking for suppressors for my Ruger Scout and I came across the rex silentium custom. Is ordering one with 3 baffles a dumb idea?

I prefer to shoot heavy subsonics, and my supers are usually below minimum charge too, and I'd probably wearing earpro if I was shooting supers anyway, so I figured how bad would it be?

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  1. 1 year ago
    sage

    Everything depends on muzzle pascals which in turn are dependent on barrel length and cartridge. If you're firing 7.62x39 from a 26" barrel you won't drop a decibel even doubling the internal volume of the suppressor. If you're rifle is in .300 RCM with a barrel of twenty inches you'll see a different outcome.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      That doesn't really help me. I was more interested in hearing from someone who had a tiny suppressor like this and could give an anecdote.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        I have a Turbo K. It’s a bit bigger than what you’ve ordered, but with a similar number of baffles. Since it’s a .22 cal suppressor, it’ll never really be hearing safe on anything I’ll put it on. That said, it definitely makes a big difference. I’ve fired it without ear pro and, while uncomfortable, it’s not deafening or painful. If I were you’d I’d probably add an extra baffle to bring it up to four. But it will still help, especially with making subs tolerable without ear pro

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          my FFL just called and they got my Turbo K in today! I already have an R9 and it works pretty well on 5.56, but I figured might as well get the dedicated can instead of swapping between my 9mm and my rifle.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            Nice! I’ve been looking to pick up an R9. I have a Resonator R2 that sits on my hd gun, but it’s so damn long it’s just like a normal carbine now even with the 10.5” barrel. Makes 300 subs laughably quiet though

            [...]
            I also vote for 4 baffles.
            Whatever you choose, can is better than no can.

            True

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              What upper is that?

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                That’s a Robinson Arms XCR broski, 10.5” 300blk

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Oh, I've got a rugged micro 30, it's 3 baffles long, and 2 short, it's pretty loud. Is MG7 too big? I'm thinking of buying one of those, honestly. I'm just lazy af, so I'll need silencershop to carry them first, or someone else invent a fingerprint kiosk network.

        Years ago, last century, a guy down in Oregon (forget his name, sorry)
        > showed up on the NFA scene.
        > He started cranking out suppressors.
        > His main place of business was on Tom Bowers' subguns.com
        > he (not Tom, but the guy whose name I forget) did early viral marketing
        > before we really had that phrase available.
        > He shows up at SHOT with a really small 5.56 suppressor
        > He calls it the "Smidget".
        > Shorter than the Gemtech Outback
        > half as long as the Gemtech M4-96D 5.56 suppressor
        > claims Alaska State Police have adopted it.
        > I'm standing there as Doc Dater looks at it
        > "the blast baffle is too close to the muzzle"
        > "your expansion chambers aren't big enough"
        > "this will do maybe one or two dB but, what's it rated for?"
        > forget the number quoted but it was better than fullsize cans
        > "ok, good luck"
        > months pass and shipment questions begin to pop up at subguns.com
        > many complaints of "I paid, I'm not getting answers"
        > guy was using inbound money to pay for equipment,
        > and a new truck,
        > and apparently coke
        > oh, and the 'Alaska State Police' thing was one statie in Anchorage bought one personally
        Field reports revealed the blast baffle was indeed too close to the muzzle and had tremendous amounts of premature wear and tear.
        I'm not saying the mini can pictured by OP is a scam. But it's awfully small and you're fighting dimensional problems with a small suppressor.

        Rex are legit.

  2. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Suppressing a Ruger scout can be a pain in the ass btw op
    It's been done obviously and can work but it seems to be a crap shoot dictated by your gun, get an alignment rod to be sure.

  3. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Years ago, last century, a guy down in Oregon (forget his name, sorry)
    > showed up on the NFA scene.
    > He started cranking out suppressors.
    > His main place of business was on Tom Bowers' subguns.com
    > he (not Tom, but the guy whose name I forget) did early viral marketing
    > before we really had that phrase available.
    > He shows up at SHOT with a really small 5.56 suppressor
    > He calls it the "Smidget".
    > Shorter than the Gemtech Outback
    > half as long as the Gemtech M4-96D 5.56 suppressor
    > claims Alaska State Police have adopted it.
    > I'm standing there as Doc Dater looks at it
    > "the blast baffle is too close to the muzzle"
    > "your expansion chambers aren't big enough"
    > "this will do maybe one or two dB but, what's it rated for?"
    > forget the number quoted but it was better than fullsize cans
    > "ok, good luck"
    > months pass and shipment questions begin to pop up at subguns.com
    > many complaints of "I paid, I'm not getting answers"
    > guy was using inbound money to pay for equipment,
    > and a new truck,
    > and apparently coke
    > oh, and the 'Alaska State Police' thing was one statie in Anchorage bought one personally
    Field reports revealed the blast baffle was indeed too close to the muzzle and had tremendous amounts of premature wear and tear.
    I'm not saying the mini can pictured by OP is a scam. But it's awfully small and you're fighting dimensional problems with a small suppressor.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      The suppressors are larger than OP's photo makes them look. 1.7" diameter, full auto rated, no barrel length restriction fwiw

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Is the baffle stack removable? The forward half looks to have welds every 1/2" or so.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          Yeah it's fully welded and not user serviceable

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            >not user serviceable
            Bummer. I've got a couple of suppressors. Only one I can open and clean the baffles. It vexes me that my 22LR can -- the one that gets the most dirty -- is welded shut.
            > it's a ragret

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              Rifle cans generally never even need cleaning because 1) you're probably not firing uncoated lead and 2) the blast blasts away all foreign particles

              With that being said, where the heck did you find a .22lr can that wasn't serviceable? I didn't even think they made those. Maybe in Yurup where you can get 22lr cans for 20$ or something, then it would make sense

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                >22lr can that wasn't serviceable
                Gemtech Outback. My first suppressor. Purchased last century. My chief signed so personal ownership, no trust hackery.
                The original ones, pre-buyout, back when Gemtech was in Boise ID, were welded shut.
                nu-Gemtech offers a "core upgrade" for $200 or $300 but I'm not sure I trust the nu-Gemtech (on the east coast)

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                Gemtech now owned by S&W, I wouldn't trust them either

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                >Gemtech now owned by S&W
                Yeah, when Doc, Greg, and Kel sold Gemtech, they sold to a guy whos name I forget.
                That started good, but didn't go well.
                > good to see Doc and Kel cash out
                > hope Tom H in Colorado didn't get a penny
                S&W swooped in and picked up the logo and, maybe, the IP.
                > Doc was really good about having Gemtech license the IP from a corp he owned

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >full auto rated, no barrel length restriction fwiw
        yeah that's bs, and you're coping hard if you think they have some special titanium that's different than everyone else in the world.

        Ti cans are for very very slow rate of fire

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          It's heat treated stainless

          ?t=202

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            Does heat treated stainless matter when its gonna get heating up until those crystallisation structures change if you use it full auto?

  4. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    OP fun fact when yhm was designing their turbo cans, they had way more baffles and werent happy with the results so some engineer there suggested removing a bunch, and the results were very surprising. The turbo k has like 3 and sounds really good for its size

  5. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Better play it safe and get 4 baffles. It will still be lighter and shorter than basically everything else on the market

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      I have a Turbo K. It’s a bit bigger than what you’ve ordered, but with a similar number of baffles. Since it’s a .22 cal suppressor, it’ll never really be hearing safe on anything I’ll put it on. That said, it definitely makes a big difference. I’ve fired it without ear pro and, while uncomfortable, it’s not deafening or painful. If I were you’d I’d probably add an extra baffle to bring it up to four. But it will still help, especially with making subs tolerable without ear pro

      I also vote for 4 baffles.
      Whatever you choose, can is better than no can.

  6. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Yes you will be disappointed with a 3 baffle can. Get the mg7k at a minimum...what caliber are you trying to suppress .308?

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Yes it's 308 but like I said mostly subsonics and light loads

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Yeah, those short cans are for just taking the edge off of supersonics...will sound like ass on subsonic...I would really go mg7k or mg10x or what not, the one that screws in half

  7. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    yeah

  8. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Are slower bullets quieter than faster ones, both with an equal powder charge? If the bullet stays in the can longer, that gives the can more time to more uniformly pressurize, and thus the gas is at a lower peak pressure when vented into the atmosphere? Am I right in thinking this is the case?

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      generally yes. and because the gas itself is moving slower too.

      i have personally witnessed it with 556, comparing 77gr to 55gr with a 14.5 barrel and 6" suppressor. identical powder charge, the 77gr was noticeably quieter despite both being super.

  9. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    >Will three baffles disappoint me
    Yes.

  10. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    if you are shooting 300blk bolt action youll need at least 5-7 baffles to shoot without earpro

    3 baffles will be painful and not enjoyable at all

  11. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    No one here owns or shoots guns. Buy whatever you want. Even a 3 baffle can is miles ahead of a no baffle can.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >you should purposefully buy bad shit because it's better than no shit
      based moron

  12. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I find "Kurz" suppressors to be disappointing. I only would get one for a pistol and that's only because really long/heavy ones are awkward to use with them.

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