![]() ![]() I watched this happen to a suppressed rifle a few months ago.Ī properly attached silencer changes point of impact, but does not make it less accurate. A bullet merely rubbing on the end cap will yaw badly and open up groups to two feet or more. The most obvious sign of baffle strikes are bent baffles or end caps, but it does not have to be this obvious. I have seen what others are using and how baffle strikes occur. I do not own any silencers of my own yet, but am going to be making a few soon. If the silencer is properly aligned, then everything should look even, if you can see anything that is out of line, then the silencer is probably seriously misaligned. Look down the barrel, you should be able to see the baffles and end cap. Attach the silencer and take out the bolt. Lastly when shooting sans can, you havent noticed the bullets keyholeing or doing any funny business have you? its geared for shooting 175's and subsonics. if they arent then you have bigger problems.Īlso for future reference the remmy 700 SPS AAC version is IDENTICAL to the standard SPS except it has a 10 twist and is factory threaded with protector. as has been said take the gun to a different smith and make sure the threads are cut square. hopefully anything damaged in the can was a manufacture defect and not a shooter caused one as the latter isnt covered by the warranty. ![]() ![]() SWR is a top notch company, they merged with SilencerCo in july-ish. if you guys shot subs first there is a good chance the bullet wobbled inside the can and dinged a baffle. the subs though are usually in the 200-220 range and they need a faster twist. i wont say he got the wrong twist rate because the 308 shines with 168-175 which the 12 twist will stabilize. they will change the impact point but should still group. the suppressor balances the pressure curve so extreme velocity spreads are smaller. ![]()
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