Thebear_78
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2003
- Messages
- 196
My nula 1-8 twist 25/06 is under 7 pounds scoped, suppressor, and loaded.
Hope you have a gunbearer!Do you think it's worth it on a lighter gun (5-6 lbs)considering you pay a premium for the oz saved on the gun.
Will be used in the whitetail woods as well.
I took off the goofy muzzle break looking end and put a flat end cap.choose your can wisely though. I have a silencerco omega 30 which is awesome for suppression, but is 8" long and 15oz. Keep it short and light if you're able to.
What do you mean?Hope you have a gunbearer!
What model is that?Just workout more.
This is going on a 30" barrel and it will be used for hunting.
View attachment 480250
My POI shift is minimal with my suppressor at reasonably short range. Maybe it is due to a relatively stiff barrel and reasonably light suppressor. Most of the traveling quick shots will be well within the kill zone if they are presented to me. Your results may vary, but I would assume you could test to determine the POI shift. It should be consistent.This may be a stupid question, and I apologize in advance if it is, but does POI typically change between suppressed and not?
The reason I ask is that I've wondered if it was feasible to carry the suppressor in my backpack and just screw it on when a longer range shot presents itself? Could a person still take a shorter range shot without it, if time didn't permit getting the suppressor on?
With my 338 having a 30" barrel, carrying it mounted may not be ideal.
Still on the same fence as the OP and trying to learn...
While I agree with all of this information, it has no bearing on a short, light mountain rifle.Shortening a barrel always reduces preformance, when shooting in matches for 20 shot strings you can watch other shooters preformance in the wind and compair cartridges and rifle combinations when a speed up in the wind happens or a let off or the dreaded switch. the ar15 is used more than any other rifle now in high power and its easy to see the difference between a service rifle with a 20 inch barrel and a 24 inch barrel on a match rifle when shooting in the wind. I shoot a 260 and at the 600 yd line the wind moves me about half as much as a service rifle. the wind is not static every shot at 600 needs to be evaluated, it is a very rare day when you never have to change your windage from shot to shot. If a person wants to learn the wind that doesn't happen with a handfull of shots after a person has shot 10 matches he may start to become proficient with reading the wind which is your enemy for long range shooting whether shooting paper or animals. 10 matches is around 1000 shots which for high capacity cartridges is time for a new barrel so to take a 300 magnum and reduce it to a 308 by cutting the barrel off is a huge waste of potential if you leave the barrel long you get the advantages of less wind drift and better trajectory and there is no replacement for trigger time to become proficient at shooting. a person would be way better off shooting a 308 with 28 inches of barrel and getting 4 or 5 thousand rounds of barrel life. nobody will be good at reading wind and shooting in field positions without shooting lots of rounds down range. shooting in field positions is neglected, go to a range it is unlikely you will see anybody shooting any position accept off the bench which has nothing to do with hunting so will not train you in any helpfull manner
It has on the rifles I had sighted in prior to receiving the suppressors. By about .4 to .8MIL.This may be a stupid question, and I apologize in advance if it is, but does POI typically change between suppressed and not?
The reason I ask is that I've wondered if it was feasible to carry the suppressor in my backpack and just screw it on when a longer range shot presents itself? Could a person still take a shorter range shot without it, if time didn't permit getting the suppressor on?
With my 338 having a 30" barrel, carrying it mounted may not be ideal.
Still on the same fence as the OP and trying to learn...
That over the barrel suppressor looks interesting and may be very beneficial for the longer barrel.Hi guys, I have 4 rifles fitted with suppressors. More hunters than ever are hunting with short barreled rifles (<20"). Short barrel + suppressor in my experience make hunting/shooting just that bit more enjoyable.
I run local New Zealand made over barrel type suppressors - 2 x Hardy Gen V's and 2 x DPT suppressors. The Hardy suppressors are on a 223 and a 308, 20" & 16" barrels respectively. The 2 DPT's are on another short 308 Bergara takedown 16.5" and a 21" 7mm rem mag.
Sorry for the long winded comments.
Kiwi do over the barrel suppressors work better than the other type of suppressors ? Which type do you like better ?Hi guys, I have 4 rifles fitted with suppressors. More hunters than ever are hunting with short barreled rifles (<20"). Short barrel + suppressor in my experience make hunting/shooting just that bit more enjoyable.
I run local New Zealand made over barrel type suppressors - 2 x Hardy Gen V's and 2 x DPT suppressors. The Hardy suppressors are on a 223 and a 308, 20" & 16" barrels respectively. The 2 DPT's are on another short 308 Bergara takedown 16.5" and a 21" 7mm rem mag.
Sorry for the long winded comments.