hi , anyone know what causes this ? its just happened to me a second time , first time the supressor exploded and my ears are still ringing .supressors are screwed on tight . would like to know what im doing wrong as this is getting expensive.
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hi , anyone know what causes this ? its just happened to me a second time , first time the supressor exploded and my ears are still ringing .supressors are screwed on tight . would like to know what im doing wrong as this is getting expensive.
How many shots between strikes?
Out of centre bore ?
or you have fired quite a few rounds and the suppressor has worked loose ?
not a lot of shots , maybe 30 -40 ?
Gidday - if its happened on the same rifle it points to the threading not being right, some sort of mis-alignment. Off-centre bore, shoulder out of square, threading out of alignment with bore. I'd be taking the rifle to a competent machinist (who may be a gunsmith but not all gunsmiths are necessarily competent machinists) for a check-up.
How often was the suppressor checked for tightness during that 30 - 40 rounds being fired?...if suppressor not aligned with bore then i would have thought every shot would hit it.
One other option is mixed ammo, ive seen it happen on a 223, guy used 55 grain normally decided to try some 69 grain ones. Shot a group with the 55, then shifted to the 69, first shot takes the front off the supressor. Turnrd out the rifles twist was way too slow (1:12) to stableise the longer heavier bullet.
it was two different rifles and 2 different brand suppressors which is even more worrying .
Reminds me a bit of pulling splinters.:P
If you want genuine advice more detail is needed ie firearms, cal, twist rate, projectile type and weight, plus suppressor details. Gets rid of a lot of "guessing" what's happened.
I dont know the twist rates. reloaded ammo, one was a 7mm rem mag threaded by a good gunsmith but second hand suppressor. recently a .222 brno which was set up by the previous owner. I have used it for a couple of years , but did just change bullets.Only changed bullet weight slightly though . only just noticed the wee nick in the supressor when putting it away ,so dont know where to go from here. the gun hasn't had any knocks or anything. Haven't been heavy bush hunting , so unlikely to have foreign matter in the suppressor .
yes correct greg. it was the rem mag that blew up. i will try switching back to the same old bullets on the .222 . they were shooting fairly accurately , so didnt seem to be tumbling ?
take suppressor OFF and try the loads without it...are they tumbling or printing nice wee clover leaf groups... that will sort out if trebly dont like the load...
Could it be a low flash point cleaning fluid or even grease that has become boiling hot, that has flashed as the suppressor heated up, and after buying up between shots, exploded on the next shot?
.222 can generally only stabilize light weight projectiles, so if you are running anything above about 55gr in the .222 you may start running into stability issues.
I was going to say something along these lines. Even unburnt powder depending on what's going on... slow burning powder gets mixed in with grease or fouling, won't flash off under normal circumstances but detonated when everything's just right.
Exploded can mean all sorts of things, but if it's a detonation and not just a strike causing the suppressor to blow apart, then that would imply overpressure.