I run a suppressor on my gopher .22, so I can get more than one shot without getting all of them running back into holes. Educate me, why a suppressor on a .22 for matches?
I run a suppressor on my gopher .22, so I can get more than one shot without getting all of them running back into holes. Educate me, why a suppressor on a .22 for matches?
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
Brother - we agree.
I’m asking you a question to lead you into a point to extrapolate the same thing. I’m not saying there is a seal after the bullet leaves.
All I’m saying is gas remains in the barrel for a longer duration with a suppressor.
Would you disagree?
I don’t know how you could. I’m suggesting that either turbulence from the suppressor handling air or increased particulate in the gun barrel as potentially a contributor to degradation in accuracy.
God Bless,
Brandon
Gotcha - I do agree with you. It's been a long day, and I wasn't reading in comprehension.
I think the way to test the theory you're proposing is to stick with bolt guns and run the bolt according to a metronome in the 20, 10, 5 second intervals while shooting for groups, and see what we get. Possible turbulence would probably be minimized by subsonic ammo - if supersonic I think it'd have to be shot under 40 yards - the guys at Voodoo hint that transonic happens at 50-60 yards.
He said a .22 suppressor is very nice at "precision" shoots, it is just click-clang, no adverse effect on accuracy.
NRA does not allow them for regulation Smallbore.
They are very common at Precision Rifle Series, but again, NRA does not allow them at High-power or F class.
Code Name: JET STREAM