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| Re: Palmer Brass Venting Quote:
This is why the element of things such as baffling must be missing. The good news is a lot of the parts that make a suppressor function are missing with a fake suppressor. If you took off the fake suppressor and applied it to a real firearm you would fail miserably. That's the big tattle-tale sign. You would be only applying a shell onto a firearm. It would really really fail like you wouldn't believe. That's why they can sell them in the first place and that's why people should keep a fake suppressor exactly the way they bought it, cuz it's legal.
__________________ A5 Super Response Trigger Owner. Autococker Tactical Trilogy Owner X7 E Trigger Owner Woodsball. Recon/Scout Sniper/Designated Marksman/Sabre/Tactical Specialist |
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| Re: Palmer Brass Venting In my experience yes it does. I have a heavily ported barrel on my autococker and I've used both with the same barrel. The compressed air is respectably much louder. I was firing it on compressed air after the shop tech tuned it after swapping out my upper receiver. It wasn't a Palmers Brass but heavy porting is heavy porting and I got the heaviest ported barrel I could get for an autococker and to be honest it's the heaviest ported barrel I know of. The Compressed air is louder. That's why on my autococker I still only use CO2 other than CO2 is cheaper. Cockers are known as some of the quietest markers on the market as well.
__________________ A5 Super Response Trigger Owner. Autococker Tactical Trilogy Owner X7 E Trigger Owner Woodsball. Recon/Scout Sniper/Designated Marksman/Sabre/Tactical Specialist |