This is an excellent thread — thanks for starting this discussion, Frank!
Recently I assembled a
Silencer Specs Table for 50 AG commercial silencers, and so I was of course interested not only in size, price, and looks, but also in
performance.

And I realized quickly:
It is very very unlikely to compare test results across different performance tests. Say airgunner
A1 conducts silencer
Test-1 producing a loudness number for silencer
S1 (in dB, or whatever unit of measure he chooses).
Now airgunner
A2 wants to know if his silencer
S2 is more or less loud than
S1. So he conducts a silencer
Test-2 and gets a loudness number.
➔ It is very very unlikely that the two loudness numbers will be comparable — because the test protocols (conditions, equipment) will almost always be wildly different.
However, there is a solution.... I find that there is a method that will produce useful data, even with different test protocols:
A silencer test that compares enough silencer models using the
same conditions for all silencers tested — such a test will produce data that can be comparable within the confines of the test.
➔ The challenge is that whoever runs the test
should have a good amount of silencers on hand....

I know mrbulk (Charlie) is one such airgunner who not only has a bunch of silencers, but also invest time to test them — and to publish his results for us. THANKS!

The above mentioned tests by Silent Thunder Ordnance (STO) are another good example.

There are a few more tests I mention in the
Specs Table.
To make this testing happen we could pool our silencers — send them to a trusted individual who is interested in conducting the tests — and then we get a both broad and comparable test results. It worked great for STO's test, why wouldn't it work for us at the AGN community?
It probably still is a good idea to figure out WHAT exactly we want to measure and HOW. For example: ▪ (1a) How loud a gun with different silencers
sounds to the shooter — because he doesn't like loud noises. ➔ Measure the sound close to the action.
▪ (1b) Or — How loud a gun with different silencers
sounds to the neighbors or the quarry — because we don't want to spook them. ➔ Measure the sound a good ways away from the muzzle.
▪ (2) How much the sound still sounds like a shot — or something else non-dangerous — for the benefits of the neighbors again. ➔ This is obviously a very subjective criterium, but there are some ways to measure this to some extent, I believe.
▪ (3) What kind of guns we are trying to silence: (a) Big bores (.30 and up) — to just get them a little more ear-friendly. (b) Medium powered guns (30-40FPE). (c) Low powered guns (15-25FPE). (d) Very low powered guns, like for the basement (sub 10FPE) — to silence them (almost) completely.
The power of the gun and the presence or absence of a shroud will make a significant difference how well a certain silencer performs. At least that is what I gathered from the STO tests:
Each silencer seems to have a certain capacity where it performs fairly well — but beyond that capacity it will not.
For example: Silencer
S1 is a monster 10" can, 2" diameter.
Silencer
S2 is half the size, a 5" dwarf with 1" dia.
When testing them with gun G1
at 30FPE — S2 does terrible compared to S1 ➔ S1 = 80dB | S2 = 100dB
However, when testing them with gun G2
at 15FPE the difference between S1 and S2 isn't that large anymore to warrant mounting a monster when a dwarf could do almost the same. ➔ S1 = 70dB | S2 = 78dB

If you have silencer test results, put them out there, plz.

Matthias