A suppressor will not save you from hearing loss. Though it may lessen it a little. Good quality electronic muffs will save your hearing
Actually the better I got the less I shot.
No that's a piece of collective wisdom that is simply false, barrel length is irrelevant when it comes to powder burn rate for best velocity. However you can drop projectile weight to gain velocity but that will have its own implications.
And in my case wrong again.
"You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin
I don't have anything against bushpigs. I just think they look ugly and that there are better options out there if maximum manoeverability is your requirement. And as far as hearing loss is concerned, again, I think there are better options.
I use hearing protection whenever I'm shooting my unsuppressed centerfire. It works.
When I owned my suppressed .270 MKV and suppressed and shortened Sako 75 7mm-08, I still wore hearing protection. It worked well.
My choice of firearm does not have any bearing on how rigorously I follow safety protocols.
You could argue that by using hearing protection AND a suppressor, you're taking all the possible precautions (short of not shooting a firearm in the first place ) against hearing loss - but I don't think the difference in noise reduction between using ear muffs with a suppressor VS ear muffs without a suppressor, makes much of a difference in typical hunting situations - where only one or two shots may be fired. And you can always use ear plugs in conjunction with muffs if you're overly anxious about it.
But I get your point. If you're not willing to fork out on quality electronic ear plugs, and you're hunting in very thick terrain where you have to rely on your hearing - a suppressed rifle is obviously going to do less damage than an unsuppressed rifle. But 'less' damage is still a form of damage, right? You could say it's a better middle ground, but it's not completely mitigating the risk of hearing loss. In that sense, suppressors could contribute to a false sense of security.
In general, I think they're a good idea. But there are ways around it without putting your ears at risk. And it may even work in your favour, because, as I said in my previous post, if maximum manoeverability is your priority, there are rifles out there which are more suited to that type of use (by design) than a chopped up Tikka, Remington, Sako, whatever.
Last edited by Frodo; 12-11-2018 at 07:14 PM.
i just think its a dumb name to call a carbine kind of like reinventing the wheel and giving it a new name
Not forgetting of course, that using a suppressor helps to not overly disturb other game animals or stock in adjacent gullies, I have a rifle that will never be suppressed and I have no drama shooting an animal in open country with it, would have muffs on if target/gong shooting though. I like having a suppressor on (my current favorite hunting rifle, .243 18" shorty) , but only on a shorter barrel, quite apart from how odd it looks on a long barrel, they just balance and carry better short.
Yes damage is still done to the hearing even when using a suppressor BUT not to the same level.. my ears will ring from a bare rifle and is quite uncomfortable. I’m only 24 and have hearing damage from growing up hunting with traditional rifles.. all my rifles are suppressed now except a traditional Sako 243 that I keep looking traditional. If you substitute a suppressor for elec earmuffs then that’s a good way to attack the problem but then what about your mate beside you or the dog you are shooting directly over top of? Or the gully just over the rise holding animals? I have had animals 100metres away not be spooked by my suppressed 7mm08 with the way it captured the sound in the space I was in. Yes a lever type gun will do the same short thing without modification.. but again, loud! and short range. A short suppressed 308, 7mm08 etc is still capable of taking shots to 3 - 400. My new short rifle is a 284 with 17” barrel. The places I generally hunt even when bushstalking will provide the opportunity to take a shot at 400. With my suppressed rifle I can do that. With a lever gun I don’t think so.
Browning BLR being the exception to the rule.......and YES I have hunted and shot deer with one recently and YES it was suppressed,suppressor fitted snug up to forestock and added only a couple of inches to overall length,was much more pleasant to shoot.
Never said that it would eliminate hearing loss... however the implication is obvious... less noise = less damage. <140Db vs 165DB+ is a significant difference in damage. Also suppressors are always on your rifle, unlike hearing protection not being always in your ears. Also there are significant disadvantages with having to manage hearing protection. Batteries, moisture, not losing them, wind noise, river noise. I have both suppressors and electronic ear protection and frankly for bush hunting they are next to useless..A suppressor will not save you from hearing loss. Though it may lessen it a little. Good quality electronic muffs will save your hearing..
Yeah well normal people shoot more with more identified opportunities to do so. Identifying opportunities comes from getting better at identifying them. Clearly your different...Actually the better I got the less I shot.
Bullocks - try shooting slow powders through pistols and getting the same performance... everything is a continuum chap and slow powder performance gets optimised in longer barrels. Conversely faster powers are optimised in shorter barrels.No that's a piece of collective wisdom that is simply false, barrel length is irrelevant when it comes to powder burn rate for best velocity. However you can drop projectile weight to gain velocity but that will have its own implications.
Who would really know?And in my case wrong again.
It’s a second hand 223 rebarreled to 300 blackout and using a Nightforce NXS compact 2.5-10x42 zero.
The zero stop set for supers and subs set on turret zero, then just need to dail to whatever range.
I’m glade we live and play in a country where we can do almost anything to our bolt rifles with no hoops and government red tape bureaucracy to say we can’t shorten and suppress compaired to Australia and the USA.
Of course ear protection will do a better job.. but in my book ear protection is a pain in the arse when bush hunting. I have fitted electronic earpieces that I wear wallaby shooting where there are a number of shooters in close proximatey and the shooting is spasmodic and unpredictable. Ear muffs when hunting are stupid.
But in the bush both are useless. On the tops with time I use foam earbuds over my suppressed rifle. You usually have time.
Suppressors are on my rifles whether I have other ear protection or not.
I can't help you with ugly. A rifle is a tool. It has to be functional. Suppressors add to that utility but the are a curse if they create unbalanced rifles. Shortening rifles is a solution to that and allows for that utility.
I can't help you with a name. I don't care what people call shortened suppressed rifles.
You get to choose for you.. but don't kid yourself, suppressing a rifle is a solution to quite a few issues... the fact that you can't quite seem to understand that people enjoy shooting suppressed rifles more than unsuppressed is clearly difficult for you. Shortening them is peripheral to that and is not the principal issue...
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