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#76 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 12, 2005
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 3,329
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One of the best gun related investments I've ever made.
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The History and Development of the M14 EBR |
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#77 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 19, 2008
Location: northeast Florida
Posts: 609
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While I've got nothing against them, I just don't feel I have enough need or desire to justify the time and expense.
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may God eternally bless the American Rifleman--- as long as one stands, resolute, liberty shall not perish. |
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#78 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 25, 2001
Location: Alabama
Posts: 18,342
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Because they are not permitted in most of the forms of shooting I do.
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#79 |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 24, 2010
Location: Central Louisiana
Posts: 3,137
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To answer the original question, what's stopping me form buying one?
1. Long NFA wait times. 2. Excessive expense. This thing is basically a lawn-mower muffler. Any decent hobbiest could cobble one together in a garage welding shop for about $40.00 in materials, total. Maybe a few more dollars to buy a 1/2X28 tap for the threads. 3. I'm not going to pay a $200 tax for a lawnmower muffler, and I'm darned sure not going to pay the exorbitant prices that many manufacturers think they're worth. 4. But hey, it's a free country (or what resembles a free country). If you want to pay the toll, then have fun with it. |
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#80 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 25, 2008
Location: Austin, CO
Posts: 19,570
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On #2, you CAN make your own but you still have to file the form and pay the fee FIRST.
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#81 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 1, 2012
Posts: 225
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Expense and paperwork/legal complexity (CLEO will not sign off on them here so has to be a trust).
I do find it ironic though that we pride ourselves on the relative ease we can get firearms in the US, and yet it is far easier/cheaper (sometimes no restrictions at all) to get suppressors in places like Italy, Poland, Norway, Sweden, Finland and even the UK or New Zealand (from what I've read so far)... |
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#82 |
Junior member
Join Date: June 21, 2009
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 1,176
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Ohio is silencer-friendly. You can't carry one on your CCW (yet...we MIGHT talk them into that someday), but you can use them pretty freely wherever it is legal to shoot. I started with a .45 MAC10 and suppressor, and quickly realized I liked suppressor more than feeding a full auto......suppressors end up costing a lot less. Sold the MAC and can back in the 1980's, then got a .22 rimfire suppressor. Everyone should own a .22 suppressor. If you buy a .22 centerfire can, you can use them on both. I recently lucked into a purchase of two 9mm suppressors that were so low in price, I couldn't refuse. They were demonstrators, and slightly outdated AAC "wet" cans that aren't made anymore. $200, for one, $225 for the other, and $400 for the two stamps: about $900 total, out the door, for two. They are very unique in that they are only 1" in diameter, one being 4" long, the other being 6" long, and they work on most all guns without higher sights being added, or piston devices to assist operation. AND, they can be used on guns of lesser caliber, like .380, .32, or .22's. I also have an SWR rifle suppressor for the .300 Win Mag. Wow on that one, too, as it not only reduces the .300 mag to about a .22 short in signature, and also reduces recoil to less than .308. There are advantages besides reducing blast, like my neighbors like me more when I use suppressors.
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#83 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 12, 2005
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 3,329
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Quote:
a single, multi-host suppressor was a much, much better deal (I am frugal) ... NO regrets. One .308 suppressor fits all of these rifles. ![]()
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The History and Development of the M14 EBR |
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#84 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 21, 2010
Location: Central FL
Posts: 1,360
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Quote:
The 300BLK AAC I've looked at is $600. Plus tax stamp, trust setup fee, and 6month+ long wait. Total is about $1k maybe more depending on the lawyer since I want a Trust done right. A SBR would be a better choice IMO... |
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#85 | |||
Senior Member
Join Date: April 19, 2012
Location: Western PA
Posts: 3,829
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Quote:
Pick up a Silencerco Saker 5.56 and take off the MAAD mount, or take apart a Silencerco Sparrow or a SWR Octane. These are all suppressors that many silencer manufacturers can't imitate, let alone hobbyists in their basements. And that's not counting the large amounts of R&D these companies do on a regular basis to make sure they have the latest and best baffle design. A buddy of mine just got back the Form 4 for his Silencerco Osprey 9, and he mentioned how much quieter it is than his Gemtech Multimount 9mm suppressor, and that one is only several years older. Quote:
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0331: "Accuracy by volume." Last edited by Theohazard; January 16, 2014 at 01:07 AM. |
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#86 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 25, 2008
Location: Austin, CO
Posts: 19,570
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Unless the silencers sold over seas are useless crap, they most certainly are over priced in the US.
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#87 |
Member
Join Date: November 29, 2012
Posts: 16
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Just like anything that is deemed 'fun', it must have taxes imposed by the government. These taxes and the raw materials used are some of the cost. Titanium is not cheap. We try to be as fair as possible with our pricing and think that we offer a great product at a fair price.
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#88 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: April 19, 2012
Location: Western PA
Posts: 3,829
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Quote:
If by "overpriced" you mean suppressors over here are much more expensive than what the equivalent product costs over there, then you're correct. But if by "overpriced" you mean the prices over here are artificially high and the companies are just cheating us, that's not the case at all.
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0331: "Accuracy by volume." |
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#89 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 25, 2008
Location: Austin, CO
Posts: 19,570
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Actually, I believe it's all symptoms of the same problem.
When you say those suppressors are "crap", you mean performance, longevity, materials, what? They don't have to pay a $200 bribe and wait 6 months to get one. Ours are expensive because people expect a product to be expensive when they have to pay an extra $200 and wait 6 months to get it. It's odd, but it's human nature. No one wants to pay $250 for a $50 product but they don't mind, relatively, paying $1000 for an $800 product. I don't believe the companies are cheating anybody for two reasons. One, it's not possible. The consumer chooses to pay the price. It doesn't matter what the price is. They can't be "Cheated" because they are willingly participating. Second, I believe the research, materials and build quality are results of the scarcity and willingness of consumers to pay a high price since they have to pay the $200. Nothing "greedy" or cheating about it. It's market driven. However, I'm thoroughly convinced that if the $200 bribe and 6 month wait vanished tomorrow, the largest share of the $800+ suppressor market would vanish with it. Folks would GLADLY pay $50 for a product that's 50% the quality when it's that easy and cheap to get one. I also think those mega-money suppressors would suddenly be priced at 1/2 or less.
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Nobody plans to screw up their lives... ...they just don't plan not to. -Andy Stanley |
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#90 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 27, 2011
Location: Ohio-Kentucky - florida
Posts: 1,221
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Yes, I think the suppressors are terrible over priced. Otherwise I would have them on all my guns. The $200 tax stamp and paperwork is bad enough. I now know how important hearing protection is as I sit here with both my ears ringing at around 50 db. Too little too late. I would still use protection if possible with suppressor though.
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#91 |
Senior Member
Join Date: March 1, 2009
Location: Midwest
Posts: 1,560
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The value is not there for most...myself included. I would have to be in one for under $400 to purchase.
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#92 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: April 19, 2012
Location: Western PA
Posts: 3,829
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Quote:
Brian, I agree with you entirely. The market is driven by all the regulation; companies have to offer the latest and best designs to compete. But if the NFA were repealed the bottom would completely drop out of the market. Companies could charge less because the NFA paperwork and restrictions were gone, but most current suppressors would still probably cost a few hundred dollars each or more. But why spend all that money on top-of-the-line stuff made out of space-age materials that will last forever when you can just buy a cheaper suppressor over-the-counter for $50 - $100 and sell it to your buddy if you don't like it? Currently, many companies try to undercut the top-tier companies by offering their suppressors as cheaply as possible. But they're still expensive due to the regulations; they rarely get even close to half the price of an equivalent top-tier suppressor. And these budget-priced suppressors have noticeably lower quality and performance as a result.
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0331: "Accuracy by volume." |
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#93 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 21, 2010
Location: Central FL
Posts: 1,360
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Quote:
With an SBR you can choose any lower you want. Suppressors are limited to what manufacturers produce for the specific weapon. |
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#94 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 30, 2010
Posts: 3,513
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Price combined with it being something I really don't need. For the price of the suppressor and the tax stamp I could buy myself a really nice high end rifle or pistol.
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#95 |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 21, 2010
Location: Central FL
Posts: 1,360
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+1 Dragline.
If I was to get a 300BLK AAC suppressor it would cost a total of $1k+ with all the expenses involved. With that amount I can walk into a Walmart and buy a Colt6920 complete rifle and take it home the same day, no stupid waiting or long approval process involved. Another thing to me, is that the NFA is another form of control and government REGISTRATION. your NFA items are now recorded with them; I like to stay under the radar and keep the gov't involvement to a minimum. |
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#96 |
Junior Member
Join Date: January 16, 2014
Posts: 11
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To answer the original question, what's stopping me form buying one?
1. Long NFA wait times. 2. Excessive expense. This thing is basically a lawn-mower muffler. Any decent hobbiest could cobble one together in a garage welding shop for about $40.00 in materials, total. Maybe a few more dollars to buy a 1/2X28 tap for the threads. 3. I'm not going to pay a $200 tax for a lawnmower muffler, and I'm darned sure not going to pay the exorbitant prices that many manufacturers think they're worth. My feelings exactly. Ohazard, you are over-stating the technology involved in most firearm suppressors IMO. PawPaw does understate, but the cost should be somewhere in line with ParkerHale and what other manufacturers sell for in countries where they are legal and recommended. Most suppressors should be between $200 and $600 and the companies would still make a very nice profit. If I could get a Sparrow for the $200 it should cost, pay the exorbitant tax of $200, and wait a reasonable amount of time for the background (like 2 weeks), I would buy one today. As it is I'll just keep using my airgun or subsonic out of a long barrel like a CZ UL. |
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#97 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: April 19, 2012
Location: Western PA
Posts: 3,829
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Quote:
The top companies are constantly re-vamping their designs to come up with the best-performing product they can. That amount of R&D is very expensive. And good silencers are very precisely machined, often from high end materiels like titanium, incolnel, and now stellite. Titanium can be difficult to work with, and inconel and stellite is extremely hard to work with. Quote:
It's amazing to me how many people seem to think silencer companies are all getting together to set the prices high just to screw us all. Because that's the only other possible explanation for why the prices are so high. But if you don't think this is some kind of big corporate conspiracy, then you have to admit that the prices are high simply due to market forces and the regulations involved.
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0331: "Accuracy by volume." |
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#98 | |
Staff
Join Date: February 12, 2001
Location: DFW Area
Posts: 24,781
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Quote:
I have no doubt that they're making really, super-duper quality silencers in the U.S. and are pricing them appropriately for what they put into them. But that's not being done because that's the only way to make a decent silencer. It's being done because of the expense and legal hassle associated with the acquisition, use and maintenance of suppressors in the U.S. Why make a silencer out of titanium, stellite or inconel? It's not because you can't make a good silencer out of steel. It's because if it wears out, it costs the user another $200 tax stamp and another wait. It's because the user can't replace internal parts himself inexpensively without breaking the law. And so on...
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Do you know about the TEXAS State Rifle Association?
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#99 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: April 19, 2012
Location: Western PA
Posts: 3,829
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Quote:
Quote:
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0331: "Accuracy by volume." |
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#100 |
Junior Member
Join Date: January 16, 2014
Posts: 11
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Where are you getting these numbers from? If this were the case, why doesn't a company come along and do this? They could completely undercut the top companies and make a huge amount of money. But they don't, and that's because the companies who charge a lot less have to make an inferior product if they still want to make money.
It's amazing to me how many people seem to think silencer companies are all getting together to set the prices high just to screw us all. Because that's the only other possible explanation for why the prices are so high. But if you don't think this is some kind of big corporate conspiracy, then you have to admit that the prices are high simply due to market forces and the regulations involved. A couple of reasons I come to the conclusion. I designed, manufactured, and sold a similar non-firearm related fluid dynamic product for 30 years. And two, I see what the other similar companies charge for suppressors around the world. And yes, the market force is, it is what people are willing to pay. It's very high IMO, you and others have formed their own opinion. I'm not sure what your opinions are based on, but I know what mine is. It depends on which supressors you're talking about. For the top-tier ones I'm definitely not overstating it. If anything, I'm understating it. The top companies are constantly re-vamping their designs to come up with the best-performing product they can. That amount of R&D is very expensive. And good silencers are very precisely machined, often from high end materiels like titanium, incolnel, and now stellite. Titanium can be difficult to work with, and inconel and stellite is extremely hard to work with. I have never had the need to work with stellite, but have worked with titanium and inconel (along with many other types of stainless) and they are just tooling, fixturing, and process considerations, not rocket science. I mentioned the sparrow because that is one I would consider being mostly a subsonic long rifle guy. $500 is way crazy for what it is, IMO. So I don't have a huge problem with the $200 stamp, but I don't feel like I am getting my moneys worth out of the $200 fee because of how long it takes. $200 seems like a premium and it would be reasonable if there was expediting going on. But in reality, it's the opposite taking place. The NFA process is a chilling process and is meant to dissuade ownership of NFA items. The chilling is having more affect on me than the price. On the other hand, I'm not going to spend $5.00 on a can of Dinty Moore, I'll just eat Ramen Noodles. Just like I have other options to shoot at a level that does not bother my neighbors, like long barreled subsonic ammo, or an airgun, I'm not spending $500 on a $200 suppressor. Last edited by robmints; January 18, 2014 at 10:35 PM. |
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nfa , silencer , suppressor |
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