TTS wrote:Dude, someone screwed a soup can to your barrel!
If it was more square I'd see if someone with a 4th axis would engrave a campbell's label on it. That'd be hilarious! It's about the same size as the Noveske KX3, but with a different baffle configuration.
I tried this out when it was still 14.5" (needed the length to be legal then anyway) and found it was awesome at diverting the concussion away from the shooter. The effect of a chamber (even one which doesn't mitigate sound) on the end of a short barrel is widely known to improve cycling reliability in short barreled gas driven guns. Even piston AK's have had one of these devices around for decades, and it's rumored to be the foundation for why the KX3 (flaming pig) was deemed a muzzle device instead of a single chamber sound suppressor. You have to have holes in your front baffle, or it's considered a can by the ATF. There are no internal baffles at all. The front screws off to facilitate cleaning.
The radial holes are tapered with their larger side aimed inward. This should cause sufficient turbulence to burn off unspent powder without making a fireworks display. Daylight testing proved positive, but that was with twice as much barrel. I haven't shot it at night yet.
And yes, it's all home-brewed out of 304 stainless. I cut the barrel down from 14.5" due to some warpage from welding slots closed from an old gas block. It was only bent enough to make it useless beyond about 70 yards but I had always blamed that on the red dot and commie ammo until I actually checked and found the barrel indeed had a bow - so when the 410 stainless hammer forged middy uppers went on sale cyber monday, I made my move to replace this upper and solve the problem with the barrel by removing that part of it. It's only got about 1500 rounds through it, and was quite accurate before the error in judgement on welding it. Should make a good pistol barrel now - we'll see!
Oops decided to hang onto my FF tube and gas tube roll pins til monday.