![]() ![]() If you are a RO/SO most of the time you don't stand in the "more" silent area straight behind the shooter. My hearing is very bad in my left ear due to a combination of reasons. But at that moment your don't have a choice, become deaf or dead. On the without hearing protection: when the shit hits your fan, you'll have some auditory exclusion but I think you'll still damage your hearing. The more obnoxious the brake the better it works. I've never heard a "more silent" brake which work very well. Most of my hunting rifles run suppressors and my longrange 7mm a big MB so I have enough experince with both to know how they can sound.Ī decent muzzle brake causes the rifle to come straight back into your shoulder and thereby the gun actually stay on the target making follow-up shots faster and more accurate. As in my original post the sound is not bad for the shooter or me using my peltors it a more obnoxious for my buddy or people behind me and to my sides. ![]() I do however agree about hearing protection. I don't run no hearing protection on every session, I do maybe 3-6 rounds a months like this, purely to be ready and familiar with the sounds in and around a building situation. The birdcage A2 flash hider will work fine I believe it is what 2 of my training partners use and it is not nearly as obnoxious as the unit on my Stag. Yes some are better than other, however I want a light, reliable firearm that can be ready 24/7 for farm attack response and protection. Also the blowback into the action is too much of a reliability risk for me. I have a melted hilux seatbelt clip to show this and had a blistered thumb. Thank you for the information about flashiders and muzzlebrakes. ![]()
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