Wanting a dedicated 5.56 suppressor for my AR. Noise, size, weight, least back pressure (gas in my face) are my requirements. These seem to fit it well. Anyone used them?
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What was your overall thoughts on the warthog? Any you prefer more?My experience has favored the Warthog over the Razor. The Razor was louder on the same barrel length host, and had more visible flash. 11.5" guns.
What was your overall thoughts on the warthog? Any you prefer more?
Otter Creek Labs Polonium | 5.56mm / .223 | Rifle | Suppressors - Capitol Armory
<p><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>ELEMENT 84</strong></span></p> <p><span style="font-size: medium;">The Otter Creek Labs Polonium is a hard-use 5.56 suppressor at its core. Unlike some competitors, it doesn't fall into the "durability abwww.capitolarmory.com
That's thr conclusion I came to as well. The Polonium would probably be killer on a dedicated .223 bolt gun, or highly tuned hunting semi (11.5" midlength with a AGB which won't run unsuppressed).The OCL polonium has higher back pressure/more gas to the face than the other two from test I’ve read. Trying to avoid that if possible.
The OCL polonium has higher back pressure/more gas to the face than the other two from test I’ve read. Trying to avoid that if possible.
Actually, it is no more gas in the face than my Sandman-S cans from my personal experiences. Don't always believe everything you read on the interwebz. And also, while I respect Jay's work and think he's doing great things, he's also only testing these cans on 1 platform. Everyone's setups are different, and what may have been gassy on his setup, might not be on yours. On mine it's not. That rifle is running a standard non-adjustable GB, carbine gas, and an H2 buffer...Nothing special, or what I'd consider "highly tuned". And it runs fine both suppressed and unsuppressed. Brass still ejects at 3 o'clock, and I've noticed no difference in gas or back pressure between my Polonium and my Sandman-S cans.That's thr conclusion I came to as well. The Polonium would probably be killer on a dedicated .223 bolt gun, or highly tuned hunting semi (11.5" midlength with a AGB which won't run unsuppressed).
They might give less gas to the face from reduced back pressure in the bore, but they definitely don't sound better on a 5.56, than a 5.56 dedicated suppressor. The dedicated 5.56 suppressor will almost always sound better, and have lower muzzle numbers.Would you ever consider a 30 cal can? They give less gas to the face and sound a bit better then dedicated 5.56 cans.
Actually, it is no more gas in the face than my Sandman-S cans from my personal experiences. Don't always believe everything you read on the interwebz. And also, while I respect Jay's work and think he's doing great things, he's also only testing these cans on 1 platform. Everyone's setups are different, and what may have been gassy on his setup, might not be on yours. On mine it's not. That rifle is running a standard non-adjustable GB, carbine gas, and an H2 buffer...Nothing special, or what I'd consider "highly tuned". And it runs fine both suppressed and unsuppressed. Brass still ejects at 3 o'clock, and I've noticed no difference in gas or back pressure between my Polonium and my Sandman-S cans.
By sound better what do you mean? It would seem they would be louder by allowing more gas to escape from the larger bore?Would you ever consider a 30 cal can? They give less gas to the face and sound a bit better than dedicated 5.56 cans.
Do whatever you think is right. Best of luck to you.I wish I had the opportunity to lay some out on a table and test them myself to choose but I don’t have that option and have to rely on actual test and folks who have ran them and actually sound like they know what they are doing and experiencing. I’m a left handed shooter shooting right hand guns, so the amount of gas in my face is far more noticeable than a right handed shooter is why it’s so high on my list.
That part you highlighted wasn’t referring to you if it came off that way in text. Just explaining how I came to the conclusion of it having more gas/back pressureDo whatever you think is right. Best of luck to you.
No only a omega36 on an ARHave you ever shot a 30 cal can and 223 can on an AR?
The tone has more to do with the materials, density, thickness of the walls & baffles, and baffle design of the suppressors, not the bore diameter. I also own both, and have put thousands of rounds through my cans. The only 2 things that bore diameter really does different on a 5.56, is muzzle DB volume, and back pressure...That's it.You just gotta try it. I’m sure you can find YouTube videos or numbers that support it as well. I have both and it’s less gas to the face and sounds slightly better, deeper tone. I still wear ear pro with a suppressor after I shot 600ish rounds and noticed ear pain as I drove home.
The tone has more to do with the materials, density, thickness of the walls & baffles, and baffle design of the suppressors, not the bore diameter.
True, but why do 2 different .30 cal cans sound totally different when shot on the same gun? They’re both .30 caliber suppressors on a .30 caliber host… By that extrapolation, they should sound at least somewhat similar…But they don’t. Example…. Sandman-S and Nomad-30 don’t sound at all alike. They’re both .30 caliber, similar lengths, and made by the same company.Tone is significantly influenced by flow rate - much more so than materials and wall thicknesses (which contribute relatively small effects to the overall sound profile).
Because the internal geometry isn't at all similar between the Sandman and Nomad.True, but why do 2 different .30 cal cans sound totally different when shot on the same gun? They’re both .30 caliber suppressors on a .30 caliber host… By that extrapolation, they should sound at least somewhat similar…But they don’t. Example…. Sandman-S and Nomad-30 don’t sound at all alike. They’re both .30 caliber, similar lengths, and made by the same company.
Then we are in agreement that baffle design, internal volume, and build materials make the biggest difference in tone, not so much the bore diameter.Because the internal geometry isn't at all similar between the Sandman and Nomad.
Then we are in agreement that baffle design, internal volume, and build materials make the biggest difference in tone, not so much the bore diameter.
I knew someday I’d eventually get you backed into a corner where you couldn’t actually disagree with me. Don’t beat yourself up too much.
I know you didn’t list it but have you looked at Huxwrx, flow through design. I’m wanting to get a 762ti or flow556k since I shoot left hand on standard ARs and blowback is high on my list .Wanting a dedicated 5.56 suppressor for my AR. Noise, size, weight, least back pressure (gas in my face) are my requirements. These seem to fit it well. Anyone used them?
I’m three months in on my wait for one of each. It‘s been a long three months so far.Just to update, I left the shop with three suppressors in jail today. Two AB warthog 5.56 & One Warthog 7.62.
I’m going to try and not think about it more than I have to…. It’ll bother me more when hunting season gets here for the 30cal can I’m sureI’m three months in on my wait for one of each. It‘s been a long three months so far.
Noise, size, weight, least back pressure (gas in my face) are my requirements. These seem to fit it well. Anyone used them?
Yeah, I try not to think about it, but I fail.I’m going to try and not think about it more than I have to…. It’ll bother me more when hunting season gets here for the 30cal can I’m sure
How are you liking the warthog?congrats I own a rugged razor 7.62 and a ab warthog 7.62
to be honest been to lazy to shoot it, I like the concept of direct thread even though it runs a QD mount in a way. less room fo errorsHow are you liking the warthog?