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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Suppressors
Talk me into or out of buying a suppressor, please.
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<blockquote data-quote="highfinblue" data-source="post: 2984912" data-attributes="member: 67530"><p>I have three in the safe with a fourth waiting on ATF approval. I was probably already on their list, and I don't even like sighting in my muzzleloader anymore. My cousin was having problems with his 300 Weatherby in a beautiful new old stock Mark V and after I torqued everything and did what I could do I wouldn't even shoot it. I used to have a brake on my 28 Nosler that would deafen anyone within 100 feet and the Bannish 30 totally tamed the beast. It shoots better suppressed; I don't even have to wear hearing protection with it now. To each his own, and my own is I want every rifle I buy, and maybe all I own to be threaded and suppressed. Are there cons, absolutely, they add length and awkwardness to the rifle no doubt, so if you're climbing mountains and expecting quick offhand shots it's probably not the best option. Sitting in a blind waiting on a whitetail, calling coyotes, sitting on the side of a canyon waiting on an elk to step out on the other side, shooting paper, banging steel; it's nice to not to have to deal with the noise and recoil.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="highfinblue, post: 2984912, member: 67530"] I have three in the safe with a fourth waiting on ATF approval. I was probably already on their list, and I don't even like sighting in my muzzleloader anymore. My cousin was having problems with his 300 Weatherby in a beautiful new old stock Mark V and after I torqued everything and did what I could do I wouldn't even shoot it. I used to have a brake on my 28 Nosler that would deafen anyone within 100 feet and the Bannish 30 totally tamed the beast. It shoots better suppressed; I don't even have to wear hearing protection with it now. To each his own, and my own is I want every rifle I buy, and maybe all I own to be threaded and suppressed. Are there cons, absolutely, they add length and awkwardness to the rifle no doubt, so if you're climbing mountains and expecting quick offhand shots it's probably not the best option. Sitting in a blind waiting on a whitetail, calling coyotes, sitting on the side of a canyon waiting on an elk to step out on the other side, shooting paper, banging steel; it's nice to not to have to deal with the noise and recoil. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Suppressors
Talk me into or out of buying a suppressor, please.
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