More Form 1 goodness- .22 LR and .30 cal
Posted: Fri Mar 05, 2021 8:28 pm
I’ve been having fun building Form 1 suppressors lately. I already posted my 9mm build- since then I have done a .22lr kit and pieced together a .30 cal can.
The .22 is an XRT Tactical kit. Everything is stainless steel for durability. I went for the dog boned tube option to shave some weight. Mine has 9 cones which clip together and form a nice stack that contains all the trash from shooting .22. It is the exact same weight as my Silencerco Sparrow and quieter. It pretty much lives on my Savage FVSR. Price wise I have 175 bucks In It including engraving.
The next one is a 7.8 inch long .30 caliber can. Mounting system is an aftermarket version of the Q plan B. Tube is a 1.5 inch titanium. Internals are 9 Dino Precision cups and one blast diffuser. In testing the Dinos did a couple decibels better without the blast diffuser but I plan on running this in some SBRs so the added durability is what made my decision. DB testing on one exactly the same as this using a really meter posted numbers as good and better than many commercially available suppressors. I have one more machining operation to totally finish it off but so far the couple test rounds I fired made me very happy. Total costs in materials including engraving in this one is just under $450.
The .22 is an XRT Tactical kit. Everything is stainless steel for durability. I went for the dog boned tube option to shave some weight. Mine has 9 cones which clip together and form a nice stack that contains all the trash from shooting .22. It is the exact same weight as my Silencerco Sparrow and quieter. It pretty much lives on my Savage FVSR. Price wise I have 175 bucks In It including engraving.
The next one is a 7.8 inch long .30 caliber can. Mounting system is an aftermarket version of the Q plan B. Tube is a 1.5 inch titanium. Internals are 9 Dino Precision cups and one blast diffuser. In testing the Dinos did a couple decibels better without the blast diffuser but I plan on running this in some SBRs so the added durability is what made my decision. DB testing on one exactly the same as this using a really meter posted numbers as good and better than many commercially available suppressors. I have one more machining operation to totally finish it off but so far the couple test rounds I fired made me very happy. Total costs in materials including engraving in this one is just under $450.