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bruiser09

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Posts posted by bruiser09

  1. I own one.

    I think it is a fine shooter and the workmanship is what you would expect.

    I like that the company makes almost every part for their guns in house, especially the barrels.

    The DI is a good bit less than the cost of their piston driven AR.

    I have seen them in the 1100-1200 range which is what I gave for mine.

  2. I own one.

    I think it is a fine shooter and the workmanship is what you would expect.

    I like that the company makes almost every part for their guns in house, especially the barrels.

    The DI is a good bit less than the cost of their piston driven AR.

    I have seen several in the 1100-1200 range and there was one here on the forum for less than that about a couple months ago.

  3. This is all good information.

    David, I agree that the best procedure is to reply to the original post.

    I also agree that leaving the original post intact is more beneficial.

    What isn't known, can't be known, is how long does it take for a post to reach it's maximum audience.

    And the fact that you can sell a Glock 19 faster and more frequent than a Savage 280 AI is proof that the buying pool varies in size by item.

    Of course, it's also true that the audience for any given item grows as the price comes down.

    You just have to find that sweet spot.

     

    I bought that 280AI by the way. Love it!

    • Like 1
  4. Hello TGO Staff!

    I'm curious to know whether there is metadata to indicate the length of time an item should be posted before the ad is updated or refreshed. 

    For example, if an item is posted on a Monday, what percentage of the membership will have seen the ad in 7 days versus 2 weeks?

    I believe it would be helpful to know whether an item should be modified after say 5, 15 or 25 days in order to achieve optimal convergence of value for the buyer versus success for the seller.

    A seller could lower their price daily but not find a buyer until there has been enough exposure, or the falling price creates a greater interest across a smaller audience.

    Basically, I have no idea how quickly the viewership rotates.

    Thanks

  5. I had a thought on how to construct a relatively simple but theoretically effective cage.

    First, find an ammo can that is roughly 30-50% larger than the items you want to protect.

    Next, construct a box from copper or aluminum that is about 1” smaller than the ammo can in height, length and depth. 

    Think of a simple shoe box type of construction having a four sided bottom and snug fitting top.

    Apply one to three lines of expanding foam to the inside bottom of the ammo can.

    Press inner box into foam and hold until the foam is firm enough to hold inner box.

    Apply foam between walls of inner box and ammo can leaving room for inner box lid to fit.

    That’s it. This box does not have to be grounded.

     

        note: searching Amazon “aluminum box” offers several ready made options.

    5983f8a0cbd39_Aluminumboxes.thumb.jpg.06b9d64075ffcdffe4ea99b5252dd21b.jpg

    Something like this could be slipped into the ammo can using a layer of bubble wrap.

     

    If you are curious, the reasoning behind this construction method follows:

    An EMP, or electromagnetic pulse, has a wide frequency spectrum ranging from VLF (very low frequency) to UV (ultraviolet). As such, the design of an “EMP Cage” would need to protect from frequencies spanning from about 3 Hz (Hertz) to 10 PHz (Petahertz), or just beyond visible light.

    The properties of the shielding material need to be just as varied as the frequencies they offer protection from. Different metals offer protection at different frequencies. Low frequency magnetic fields require a metal of more ferrous properties (or that have high permeability) Steel works for lower frequencies with lower carbon steel (often referred to as “mild steel”) being more effective because of it’s higher permeability and saturation point..

    Copper is widely used over the RF range. Aluminum also works in the RF range but usually needs to be about twice as thick as copper for the same level of affect. 

    The layers of metal are isolated to minimize galvanic decay. The corrosion is real but minimal and is only an issue over time.

    Aluminum boxes.jpg

    • Like 1
  6. Drilling the tool (spanner)? Yes. Probably require a cobalt bit.

    Drilling the barrel nut? I wouldn't do it, wouldn't advise it.

    In a pinch, I'd use vice grips and a patch of leather on the jaws to protect the surface, being carful not to apply so much pressure that the nut is damaged.

    BTW, if you decide to try the strap wrench, maybe you could apply a steel hose clamp to the nut first, to give an oblong shape for better bite.

    There is a kind of strap wrench that uses a bicycle chain. About $23 at Home Depot, made by Crescent called a chain Wrench. Go figure.

  7. The pitch of the teeth looks too fine for a common spline socket. I'm counting 42 teeth there?

    You might be able to improvise a crows foot socket as you don't really need every tooth engaged.

    I did a quick CAD drawing showing how the outside diameter of the nut need only intersect at strategic points, i.e. I'm showing 4.

    If you trace the nut on to a flat piece of sheet steel, then drilled 4 holes to accept roll pins the diameter of the pitch, followed by drilling the outer diameter to intersect the 4 holes you could then grab the steel with Vice Grips and give it some serious torque. (30 to 80 ft/lbs according to the net)

    If you could cut the 3/8" square you could use a real torque wrench.

    Sorry to be lengthy, but it's an option.

    5981407cafc20_splineopt.thumb.png.a738e8211e2fa11558512278d90609ae.png

    • Like 1
  8. Man! How did I forget to add 300 Black?!

    I have actually been criticized for owning 300 Blk. Limited use and all.

    It was my first AR. I felt like it was an ideal home defense choice and it got my first suppressor.

    I prefer it in pistol length and have 2 set up for CQB.

    I'm guilty of spending a good bit on accessories and I'm glad to see that market is growing for the AK.

    • Like 2
  9. I like the variety of posts here.

    For me, I was looking for what I hoped would be the right truck gun. 7.62x39 had comparatively unique and compelling ballistics.

    This is what I found:

    Ballistics.png.150dc8a8808154323c88bf278f9916b8.png

    What makes the 7.62x39 so great to me is that it holds it's energy better than other rifle calibers when fired through shorter barrels.

    You can still have muzzle velocities around 2000fps through a 7.5" barrel. That's impressive.

    I own the IWI Galil ACE pistol and I love it. I bought a Draco pistol as well.

    You made a great choice and I'll be curious to hear your update after you take it out.

    • Like 2
  10. I finally got my 45ACP suppressor out of jail. In anticipation of this eventuality, I had the 5" barrel on my Quarter Ten Circle 9mm AR turned .578x28 so I could directly thread the can on without an adapter.

    The work performed by Law Enforcement Sales was flawless and the function is wonderful.

    I highly recommend this courteous and professional business.

    • Like 1
  11. Bob I can help if you don't mind shipping.  I would need to measure the outside diameter (OD) of the barrel. You really need a small shoulder created for the suppressor to butt up against.  The .578 is the diameter portion of the pattern, with 28 threads per inch.  So, I'd say the barrel's OD really needs to be around .750" or so to give it a decent shoulder.
    You may be ok would just have to see.. worse case I could machine a shoulder adapter.
    But happy to help if you can't find a local resource you trust.
     
    Thx
    Mike


    The OD of this barrel is .920.
    Also, it is already crowned.
    Any idea on price and turn around time?
    Thanks, Bob

    Sent from my SM-G935V using Tapatalk

  12. I completely agree. And regardless of price, the single element I look for is reliability.

    I have owned many nice vehicles for example. But there is always that one car that started every time. I miss that one.

    (rolled it, interstate black ice, 286000 miles, ran like a sewing machine)

    I have $2500 in a SBR without a single regret.

    You're right. Price isn't first.

  13. Below, I have pasted a text file I wrote showing what I might need to spend on a custom AR15 build.

    I've only built a few and it can be surprising how fast the parts add up.

    The bottom line, from my limited experience, is that an impingement rifle will run between $700 to $2k.

    The extra money spent doesn't always mean you get a better gun.

    I swapped out several buffers on one build to eliminate FTF / FTE where I wanted to run suppressed.

    On that gun, the final cost didn't change but the performance was vastly improved.

    I'm posting this to share and learn.

     

     

    AR (Impingement) Build Cost 

     

    Upper:

    80-150      reciever

    100-200    barrel

    20-70        muzzle (compensator)

    30-70        gas block

    10-20        tube

    30-250      hand guard

    20-40        buffer tube

    20-50        buffer spring

    20-40        buffer

    total:

    330-890

     

    add:

    20-50        charging handle

    100-250    bolt carrier group

    total:

    450-1190 AR upper (pieced together)

     

    Or save buying:

    complete upper assembly (no BCG/CH)

    350-500

    add BCG/CH total:

    470-800 AR upper (assembly)q

     

    Then add:

    100-350    lower receiver

    50-150      stock

    10-200      trigger

    20-40        grip

    40-80        lower parts kit

    total:

    220-820

     

    Added to upper:

    $670 - $2010 AR (pieced together)

    $690 - $1620 AR (assembly)

     

    You can spend slightly less and quite a bit more than the prices shown here.

    These prices reflect popular choices as indicated on the web.

    This is not a build list; additional parts may be required.

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