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anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

hydro556

Gunny Sergeant
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Minuteman
Dec 1, 2007
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STL, home of the Cardinals.
I am wondering if there are any sites, etc, that may have done a lot of testing comparing the various recent muzzle brakes/compensators.

Looking to put something on my 7.62, but am not very familiar with many of the offerings. I actually didnt even realize there were so many until I started researching this. There are dozens, and they all claim to be the best.

I am just wanting something to assist with keeping the rifle on target as much as possible through recoil. To help me spot hits/misses.

I know there is a lot of talk of several of the most popular ones available, but there isnt much on a lot of the newer or more obscure ones. Thats why I would love to see some sort of comprehensive comparisons involving a lot of them, including more recent ones.
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

All around BABC has worked best for me. It is both a flash supressor and brake. Running it on a 13.5" 308 right now.

FSC-30 great recoil reduction and flash supression down range but since its a vented brake it will annoy those next to you and throw up some dust.

Surefire brake is on my 300WM and its a sleek and effective brake but throws alot of gas sideways.

Well theres three for you...think the BABC would be great on the OBR!
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

Try Varmint Al's take on Muzzle brakes here http://www.www.varmintal.com/ashot.htm
I'll add this. I have tried many different muzzle brake brands, for many different calibers. Each company represents their designs as the best, because their is little data from existing research to measure felt recoil.
There are also different types of designs for brakes specific to the type of shooting you are doing.
I've tried the Holland, Ops Inc, VAIS, Shrewd and KDF.
For instance, prone shooters don't typically want ports forcing the gas downward due to the dirt / dust it disturbs.
If this is a hunting or semi- auto gun making mostly standing shots, you want to expel the most amount of gas the quickest, and that is usually done with ports expelling gas in all directions.
I developed my own brake design for BIG Bore rifles and it is extremely effective. I tried several different designs tweaked from existing products, but settled on a design that what uniquely my own. I also found that different cartridges and barrel lengths influence the design of the brake. On Big Bore rifles and handguns you can only reduce the recoil a little bit, maybe only 20% due to the type and powder burn rate. Magnum rifle's can definitely benefit from a proper brake. The KDF brake, and the stock BOSS system brakes work very well for hunting rigs. Also the stock brake put on Armalite's AR-10's work surprisingly well.
Whatever brake you choose, make sure it can come off if you shoot at Club's. Many Clubs wont allow a brake if the shooting lanes are too confined or covered.
I suppose in order to complete a comprehensive felt-recoil reduction test, someone would have to have several rifles in popular calibers where recoil becomes an annoyance, (7mm Mags on up) install a particular brake on each one, shoot, measure felt recoil reduction, hack off an inch of the barrel, retest, etc. It would be <span style="font-style: italic">very</span> time consuming, and very expensive.
I am experimenting with my Big Bore design to use on magnum rifle calibers. It needs an extra port, and the size and angle of porting is yet to be determined.
Brakes that offer 360 degree venting are not affected by removing and replacing on a regular basis. Over time, the threads will stretch and wear making the timing of the brake to tighten up to 90 degrees farther than when it was first installed. Brakes that have NO downward ports, must be "timed" so the ports point in the same direction each time, and because of the timing issue, they should not be removed and replaced with too much frequency.
The majority of the Gunsmiths I work with, make their own brakes, with their own designs for a particular cartridge, rifle, rifle weight, and firing position. Unless the customer requests a particular pre-manufactured brake, the 'Smith will make one from scratch, usually using a cut portion of a shot out barrel as the blank.
I hope this helped a little.
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

Both of these were done with .223 brakes. I think the big take away is that the current design of the top of the line brakes results in very similar performance. So while these are in .223 you can easily surmise that brakes with similar design features will also perform well in .308.

Article 1

Article 2
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Anchor Zero Six</div><div class="ubbcode-body">All around BABC has worked best for me. It is both a flash supressor and brake. Running it on a 13.5" 308 right now.

FSC-30 great recoil reduction and flash supression down range but since its a vented brake it will annoy those next to you and throw up some dust.

Surefire brake is on my 300WM and its a sleek and effective brake but throws alot of gas sideways.

Well theres three for you...think the BABC would be great on the OBR! </div></div>

I also noted that with my FSC30 and if the BABC were available a few years ago, I would've gotten that. It's getting rave reviews at m4carbine.net
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

I run a Triangle Shooting Sports Rolling Thunder break on my 16" Armalite AR-10. I am pleased with it, I am much more able to control the rifle with this break. It is very loud though, its not called the rolling thunder for nothing!
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

The JP rifles brakes are very effective. The tactical version looks good and works great. Took the recoil on my Rem. LTR .308 down to just about nothing.

I like sound suppressors better. though.
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

Throw my two cents in. Before i bought my first brake for my 223, i scoured brian enos website looking for what three gunners chose as their favorite, and through some very unscientific research, it seemed like the sjc titan was the one to beat. I have it and it is pretty awesome. That being said....I don't think there is enough difference between the top five recommended brakes to even notice. They will all probably do as equal as the next as long as your talking one that was developed by people that actually shoot and compete.
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

Another good one is the Smith Enterprises brake. There's a video on the first brake shown on a full auto M14, this is their Coast Guard brake. No noticeable muzzle rise. Also note the video for the 5.56mm/6.8mm/.30cal Muzzle Brake further down the page on a SIG 516 and at the bottom of the page a full BetaMag dump out of a M4 carbine. Same results.
Smith Enterprises muzzle brakes.
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

A) I think that most brakes will reduce your muzzle flip and felt recoil in a satisfactory manner. Insisting on a specific one may be counterproductive.

B) I seriously doubt that any muzzle brake, in itself, will reduce flip to the point where you can consistently observe hits. That's pretty hard for the shooter to do under essentially any circumstances.

There are techniques that can allow this; but the tools that make it work involve a bipod and a sling, and are completely independent of any recoil reduction devices.

Greg
 
Re: anyone link me to comprehensive muzzle brake tests

Greg brought up 2 real good points ^^^.

I also think that 90+% of muzzle brakes available today, are going to perform their intended purpose to a fairly satisfactory manner. Pick one and roll.

I also agree that I don't think a muzzlebrake alone is going enable you to consistantly spot you hits. It's gonna help, but you do too.

Spotting your hits on a pretty consistant basis is not voodoo. It involves proper form, breathing, trigger control, and follow thru. And most importantly, lots of practice of all these tecniques put together, culminating in a single shot event were you can not only call your shot off the reticle, but also seen you trace to confirm.