Have been shooting a metric ton as well as training a lot of people over the last months. Day. Night. In 115 degrees. Sand storm. Rain and mud. Whatever.
While I haven't picked up some weird Jedi trick or anything, something hit me the other day that stuck with me for a bit and had me rethink something. It's something that I had already done years ago, to an extent, when deployed while carrying a Mk12.
As most of you know, the Mk12 is an 18 inch heavy barrel SPR. Basically a 18 inch HBAR 'carbine' with an optic on it. Given that issued weapons can range from 10.3 all the way up to a 20 inch A4, the 18 inch barrel on these wasn't some crazy long length. We 'adopted' the Mk12 to be used as basically a regular carbine by carrying a pouch for the suppressor, adding a MRDS on the top of the optic which put it at basically the height of modern RDS risers and even would take the QD bipod off the gun until it was needed. This gave you a 18 inch gun that while not as light as a Mk18 or shorter variants, was still capable as a 'carbine' and removed a lot of the downsides you have with larger, longer, heavier precision specific weapons. I've cleared structures with a stripped down Mk12Mod1 and Insight MRDS on it. I'd do it again tomorrow if I had to.
So this got me thinking about the 11.5 carbine I use 99.8% of the time with a suppressor on it. Let's look at the benefits of having that suppressor on it and then I'll tell you where we're going with this:
- Quieter (duh)
- Slightly faster muzzle velocity; in reality, looking at the terminal ballistics threshold on M193, I'm getting ~4 extra yards from the added velocity. Not life changing.
- Less/better environmental disturbance (kicking less dirt up off of things when shooting, etc)
- Significant flash suppression at night
That's about it.
The cons:
- It's heavier
- Changes center of gravity
- It's the length of a 16 inch carbine with the suppressor attached
- Possibility for gas issues
- Dirty
- No recoil dampening / negates any benefit from a quality brake
I've determined that for a carbine (not talking about precision guns here!), suppressors are basically only really useful (other than if you're shooting alone or just dicking around) for night time shooting due to the sound reduction and primarily, due to the superior flash suppression.
But..but..its quieter!?!
Right.
But it's not like its a fart in the wind quiet, and I'm already wearing electronic ear pro with comms attached so being able to fire the weapon without hearing protection is moot. The gun is lighter and faster. My MAMS brake gives me the recoil of a 22LR and has allowed for much faster weapon presentation and rounds on target. Any 'loss' of terminal ballistics due to the negligible loss in FPS at the muzzle is not even measurable. The only real con is 'its loud' ; see: Everyone is wearing Peltors or an AMP headset anyways. Plus if you're using sidearms and/or going inside structures, you're using already using headsets anyways.
Take that suppressor off during the day time as it's not helping shit. Stow it in the zip on panel on your carrier. Bring that bitch out when you go to grab your PVS31 insert when the sun starts going on.
Fight me.
While I haven't picked up some weird Jedi trick or anything, something hit me the other day that stuck with me for a bit and had me rethink something. It's something that I had already done years ago, to an extent, when deployed while carrying a Mk12.
As most of you know, the Mk12 is an 18 inch heavy barrel SPR. Basically a 18 inch HBAR 'carbine' with an optic on it. Given that issued weapons can range from 10.3 all the way up to a 20 inch A4, the 18 inch barrel on these wasn't some crazy long length. We 'adopted' the Mk12 to be used as basically a regular carbine by carrying a pouch for the suppressor, adding a MRDS on the top of the optic which put it at basically the height of modern RDS risers and even would take the QD bipod off the gun until it was needed. This gave you a 18 inch gun that while not as light as a Mk18 or shorter variants, was still capable as a 'carbine' and removed a lot of the downsides you have with larger, longer, heavier precision specific weapons. I've cleared structures with a stripped down Mk12Mod1 and Insight MRDS on it. I'd do it again tomorrow if I had to.
So this got me thinking about the 11.5 carbine I use 99.8% of the time with a suppressor on it. Let's look at the benefits of having that suppressor on it and then I'll tell you where we're going with this:
- Quieter (duh)
- Slightly faster muzzle velocity; in reality, looking at the terminal ballistics threshold on M193, I'm getting ~4 extra yards from the added velocity. Not life changing.
- Less/better environmental disturbance (kicking less dirt up off of things when shooting, etc)
- Significant flash suppression at night
That's about it.
The cons:
- It's heavier
- Changes center of gravity
- It's the length of a 16 inch carbine with the suppressor attached
- Possibility for gas issues
- Dirty
- No recoil dampening / negates any benefit from a quality brake
I've determined that for a carbine (not talking about precision guns here!), suppressors are basically only really useful (other than if you're shooting alone or just dicking around) for night time shooting due to the sound reduction and primarily, due to the superior flash suppression.
But..but..its quieter!?!
Right.
But it's not like its a fart in the wind quiet, and I'm already wearing electronic ear pro with comms attached so being able to fire the weapon without hearing protection is moot. The gun is lighter and faster. My MAMS brake gives me the recoil of a 22LR and has allowed for much faster weapon presentation and rounds on target. Any 'loss' of terminal ballistics due to the negligible loss in FPS at the muzzle is not even measurable. The only real con is 'its loud' ; see: Everyone is wearing Peltors or an AMP headset anyways. Plus if you're using sidearms and/or going inside structures, you're using already using headsets anyways.
Take that suppressor off during the day time as it's not helping shit. Stow it in the zip on panel on your carrier. Bring that bitch out when you go to grab your PVS31 insert when the sun starts going on.
Fight me.