I have many stamps and the last one I bought was a Dominus SR circa '21, so I am a pre-PS testing buyer. It seems all suppressor threads are now peppered with PS info and there has been several nagging thoughts I have about the testing methodology.
1) Milspec ammo is loaded to pressure spec and handloaded ammo is dialed in for each particular firearm/barrel as well as projectile, etc. When it comes to say m193, not all m193 are created equal within the same box much less the entire universe of production. Isn't it accurate to assume that pressure variability within particular rounds would influence the test results?
2) Furthermore, let's assume that all rounds have magically identical pressure spec with no SD. Wouldn't all pressure be conserved and, all other things being equal in the firearm, can volume would determine sensor (non-ear) detectable pressure readings? It stands to reason that pressure is conserved, so we are only talking about can volume and exit pathways for the gas over linear time. IE - smaller volume = more pressure OR less air trapped/suppressed.
3) Via the "Ideal Gas Law", I do not see any particular variable to account for baffle efficiency (or less) to drive sensor-detectable (non-ear) pressure readings.
My hypothesis - Given the variability in experienced/heard sound quality, I tend to still lean toward can volume + experienced sound vs. stats because physics. At a minimum, particular ammo pressure variability will drive variability in PS-methodology testing.
TLDR - PS is blackbox snake juice.
Educate me. Thanks.
1) Milspec ammo is loaded to pressure spec and handloaded ammo is dialed in for each particular firearm/barrel as well as projectile, etc. When it comes to say m193, not all m193 are created equal within the same box much less the entire universe of production. Isn't it accurate to assume that pressure variability within particular rounds would influence the test results?
2) Furthermore, let's assume that all rounds have magically identical pressure spec with no SD. Wouldn't all pressure be conserved and, all other things being equal in the firearm, can volume would determine sensor (non-ear) detectable pressure readings? It stands to reason that pressure is conserved, so we are only talking about can volume and exit pathways for the gas over linear time. IE - smaller volume = more pressure OR less air trapped/suppressed.
3) Via the "Ideal Gas Law", I do not see any particular variable to account for baffle efficiency (or less) to drive sensor-detectable (non-ear) pressure readings.
My hypothesis - Given the variability in experienced/heard sound quality, I tend to still lean toward can volume + experienced sound vs. stats because physics. At a minimum, particular ammo pressure variability will drive variability in PS-methodology testing.
TLDR - PS is blackbox snake juice.
Educate me. Thanks.