Someone has ever tried a firearm silencer in an airgun I wonder if it will work.
image gusamerica.com
So I have designed and built, legally, both airgun and firearm moderators and suppressors. The firearm designs technically can function on an airgun with the correct adapters, however they don't generally work terribly well compared to their airgun counterparts. Why?
Well a couple reasons. The most obvious is that expectations are radically different for the firearms industry than the airgun industry, so airgun moderators are comparatively larger relative to caliber/power and are intended to make the airgun much quieter. A rimfire suppressor is typically a pretty small device, and meant simply to make your rimfire no longer painful to shoot without earpro, not so quiet nobody would ever figure out what you're doing, as the action of the rimfire itself is typically fairly loud. (even the firing pin strike is hardly quiet) Then there are elements of materials and design. Bullets are relatively resistant to cross-flow in a suppressor, and expectations for accuracy are typically lower than with airguns. As a result they use architectures which will cause POI shift and pellet destabilization in some cases. Airgun moderators, using just cold air rather than burning powder, can use materials such as felt and foam which wouldn't stand up to use on a firearm. This allows further sound damping than you'll find in firearms suppressors.
So, in short, you could do it hypothetically but you'd probably not like the results. I hope that helps.![]()
So I have designed and built, legally, both airgun and firearm moderators and suppressors. The firearm designs technically can function on an airgun with the correct adapters, however they don't generally work terribly well compared to their airgun counterparts. Why?
Well a couple reasons. The most obvious is that expectations are radically different for the firearms industry than the airgun industry, so airgun moderators are comparatively larger relative to caliber/power and are intended to make the airgun much quieter. A rimfire suppressor is typically a pretty small device, and meant simply to make your rimfire no longer painful to shoot without earpro, not so quiet nobody would ever figure out what you're doing, as the action of the rimfire itself is typically fairly loud. (even the firing pin strike is hardly quiet) Then there are elements of materials and design. Bullets are relatively resistant to cross-flow in a suppressor, and expectations for accuracy are typically lower than with airguns. As a result they use architectures which will cause POI shift and pellet destabilization in some cases. Airgun moderators, using just cold air rather than burning powder, can use materials such as felt and foam which wouldn't stand up to use on a firearm. This allows further sound damping than you'll find in firearms suppressors.
So, in short, you could do it hypothetically but you'd probably not like the results. I hope that helps.![]()
So I have designed and built, legally, both airgun and firearm moderators and suppressors. The firearm designs technically can function on an airgun with the correct adapters, however they don't generally work terribly well compared to their airgun counterparts. Why?
Well a couple reasons. The most obvious is that expectations are radically different for the firearms industry than the airgun industry, so airgun moderators are comparatively larger relative to caliber/power and are intended to make the airgun much quieter. A rimfire suppressor is typically a pretty small device, and meant simply to make your rimfire no longer painful to shoot without earpro, not so quiet nobody would ever figure out what you're doing, as the action of the rimfire itself is typically fairly loud. (even the firing pin strike is hardly quiet) Then there are elements of materials and design. Bullets are relatively resistant to cross-flow in a suppressor, and expectations for accuracy are typically lower than with airguns. As a result they use architectures which will cause POI shift and pellet destabilization in some cases. Airgun moderators, using just cold air rather than burning powder, can use materials such as felt and foam which wouldn't stand up to use on a firearm. This allows further sound damping than you'll find in firearms suppressors.
So, in short, you could do it hypothetically but you'd probably not like the results. I hope that helps.![]()
Good info, and one other reason to buy a real "Airgun" device instead of adapting a firearm "silencer". Good airgun suppressors are $150 to maybe $200. Because firearm suppressors must stand up to much more abuse, the standards are much higher, and so is the price. While the firearm suppressor may not be regulated in Mexico, the price of the firearm suppressor is probably 2 or 3 times higher than an airgun suppressor.
Just a thought!
I thought it was illegal for a civilian (non-cartel member) to own a firearm in Mexico? Can they get a special license?
Hoot