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The Range
NFA & Class III Discussion
quietest suppressed centerfire pistol carteridge
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<blockquote data-quote="338Shooter" data-source="post: 1281913" data-attributes="member: 3449"><p>There are a lot of factors. Baffle efficiency has an effect on how big the bore can be. The more efficient the design, the quieter the can even with a bigger bore. Look at what AAC did with the Ti-Rant. Simple K baffle design, but they made it work better and the .45 can is beating most if not all the 9mm cans DRY. The baffles cause the gas to take the volume of the can instead of just jetting right though. The better they do this the quieter it is going to be and the effect of the larger aperture is going to be reduced.</p><p></p><p>Volume, Baffle Efficiency, Bore Diameter are all things that contribute to the effectiveness of a suppressor. You can have a huge suppressor with a poor baffle design that won't work for squat no matter what the aperture is.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="338Shooter, post: 1281913, member: 3449"] There are a lot of factors. Baffle efficiency has an effect on how big the bore can be. The more efficient the design, the quieter the can even with a bigger bore. Look at what AAC did with the Ti-Rant. Simple K baffle design, but they made it work better and the .45 can is beating most if not all the 9mm cans DRY. The baffles cause the gas to take the volume of the can instead of just jetting right though. The better they do this the quieter it is going to be and the effect of the larger aperture is going to be reduced. Volume, Baffle Efficiency, Bore Diameter are all things that contribute to the effectiveness of a suppressor. You can have a huge suppressor with a poor baffle design that won't work for squat no matter what the aperture is. [/QUOTE]
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quietest suppressed centerfire pistol carteridge
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