Figure I'd put this up for those of you that own Liberty cans or those considering 'em. Plus everyone is always curious who has what for CS in this biz. Some places cover 'em, some don't, some make you pay part. With Liberty I had to send these two pictures, pics of the threads and an explanation, then they sent me an RMA. I had to pay shipping to them. The received the can on May21 and I emailed yesterday for an update having not heard anything just to receive a tracking number for a reply and that it had been fixed and to be sure to read the notes and information included with it.
So all in all I gotta give 'em a big thumbs up. Had this been AAC they'd have likely said "it's just superficial, it's okay, we won't fix it" and if they DID offer to fix it, it'd be my fault and 100% on me. And that's after months of the run around. (At this point I essentially consider AAC stuff disposable if it ever fucks up --shit warranty and not worth the money to fix).
Had this can forever, one of the first Mystic X's made actually. It's been used on every 9mm I can fit it on, mostly handguns. It was an inexpensive and fairly lightweight multical can
Could be worse and looks superficial, I originally thought it was just an endcap strike but this can can be taken down and I found four baffles that had been hit too. The groups went to straight shit the moment it happened though and that was the tell. More than six inches off at what, 25 feet? Not sure what the cause was but no problems until "that day". Was using it on a Kriss, had used it plenty before, like I say, this is an older can and was pretty well used on 9mm pistols, which it was bought for.
(Last four baffles and endcap have elongated holes with the bottom edge of the hole as oriented above "folded" out in direction of the bullet. The funky look of the top of the hole has more to do with me being a poor photographer, shadows and the fact the monocore stack has curved baffles giving the holes in the image a torn or distorted look.)
So all in all I gotta give 'em a big thumbs up. Had this been AAC they'd have likely said "it's just superficial, it's okay, we won't fix it" and if they DID offer to fix it, it'd be my fault and 100% on me. And that's after months of the run around. (At this point I essentially consider AAC stuff disposable if it ever fucks up --shit warranty and not worth the money to fix).
Had this can forever, one of the first Mystic X's made actually. It's been used on every 9mm I can fit it on, mostly handguns. It was an inexpensive and fairly lightweight multical can
Could be worse and looks superficial, I originally thought it was just an endcap strike but this can can be taken down and I found four baffles that had been hit too. The groups went to straight shit the moment it happened though and that was the tell. More than six inches off at what, 25 feet? Not sure what the cause was but no problems until "that day". Was using it on a Kriss, had used it plenty before, like I say, this is an older can and was pretty well used on 9mm pistols, which it was bought for.
(Last four baffles and endcap have elongated holes with the bottom edge of the hole as oriented above "folded" out in direction of the bullet. The funky look of the top of the hole has more to do with me being a poor photographer, shadows and the fact the monocore stack has curved baffles giving the holes in the image a torn or distorted look.)