***(Edit: The original idea I propose here won't work, not as intended. Will need to directly blind pin the suppressor to the barrel if I can do it at all, legal and how I want it, and hopefully warrantied, which all pose other problems.)***
Hi, I'm in a non-SBR state. So we come up with shit like blind pinned AAC SDN-6 mounts on M4 carbines just to lose the 1.5"
Anyway, I'd like what goes for a suppressed PDW. A small and light .300BLK. I already have a 16" AAC and love it, so I'd really like to take advantage of the short barrels, from 8.5 to 12.5 or so. I'd like a carbine FF rail or whatever longest will fit without intruding on the suppressor. I was thinking about using a KAC URX3 since the bottom comes off for access to the barrel nut. I use non-FF KAC rails on my M4's for similar reasons, they need to be tightened from time to time.
So that taken care of, what I need now is a suppressor I can weld to the end of the barrel that brings the length to 16-16.5" and works well to boot. Now what I had in mind was to find the appropriate suppressor, and permanently weld a 1/4" or so nut or ring to the end that is threaded the same as the barrel while threaded on an older barrel or an appropriately threaded rod so as to keep everything perfectly inline.
Then on the rifle, ideally having an extra 1/2" threaded on the end, tack (or permanently?) weld another 1/4" or so nut or ring w/same ID but smaller OD to the end of the barrel, having been ground down and properly indexed to the suppressor in the first place.
Final step, thread on the suppressor using some kind of sealant that will prevent carbon buildup, which ideally will be indexed for accuracy, and tack weld the two nuts or rings where they meet.
This would basically be a permanently suppressed 16" AR. AAC sells a suppressor just for this in 5.56 but not .300BLK so it isn't entirely unpopular, particularly in no SBR land.
Ultimately, you could use a lightweight barrel and when it has reached its round count, remove it like normal, then using a dremel or such, carefully cut the welds so as not to damage the welded ring on the suppressor. Touch this up with a file, clean out the suppressor really well, and repeat with a new barrel.
Am I missing anything here? Won't this make me a legal (but 16" and perm.) suppressed shorty? Won't this retain accuracy due to indexing it, or am I missing something here too? And won't this be "permanent" by definition, since cutting is involved? I mean, it is for the AAC 5.56 can...
What do you guys think? Am I out there, or is this a feasible way around the law while staying legal? I've had talks with some manufacturers that say while it voids some warranties, it will in fact work with rifles. AAC said it would be okay and wouldn't violate warranty IF they were to make a .30 can that had that nut attached like their 5.56 does. Apparently, according to AAC, it won't clog up enough to worry about using a rifle with rifle ammo, 5.56 or .300BLK by the time the barrel is smoked.
Finally, any recommendations for cans that would suit this endeavor over others? What about reliable, yet light contour barrels, non-chromed?
Thanks for reading.
Hi, I'm in a non-SBR state. So we come up with shit like blind pinned AAC SDN-6 mounts on M4 carbines just to lose the 1.5"
Anyway, I'd like what goes for a suppressed PDW. A small and light .300BLK. I already have a 16" AAC and love it, so I'd really like to take advantage of the short barrels, from 8.5 to 12.5 or so. I'd like a carbine FF rail or whatever longest will fit without intruding on the suppressor. I was thinking about using a KAC URX3 since the bottom comes off for access to the barrel nut. I use non-FF KAC rails on my M4's for similar reasons, they need to be tightened from time to time.
So that taken care of, what I need now is a suppressor I can weld to the end of the barrel that brings the length to 16-16.5" and works well to boot. Now what I had in mind was to find the appropriate suppressor, and permanently weld a 1/4" or so nut or ring to the end that is threaded the same as the barrel while threaded on an older barrel or an appropriately threaded rod so as to keep everything perfectly inline.
Then on the rifle, ideally having an extra 1/2" threaded on the end, tack (or permanently?) weld another 1/4" or so nut or ring w/same ID but smaller OD to the end of the barrel, having been ground down and properly indexed to the suppressor in the first place.
Final step, thread on the suppressor using some kind of sealant that will prevent carbon buildup, which ideally will be indexed for accuracy, and tack weld the two nuts or rings where they meet.
This would basically be a permanently suppressed 16" AR. AAC sells a suppressor just for this in 5.56 but not .300BLK so it isn't entirely unpopular, particularly in no SBR land.
Ultimately, you could use a lightweight barrel and when it has reached its round count, remove it like normal, then using a dremel or such, carefully cut the welds so as not to damage the welded ring on the suppressor. Touch this up with a file, clean out the suppressor really well, and repeat with a new barrel.
Am I missing anything here? Won't this make me a legal (but 16" and perm.) suppressed shorty? Won't this retain accuracy due to indexing it, or am I missing something here too? And won't this be "permanent" by definition, since cutting is involved? I mean, it is for the AAC 5.56 can...
What do you guys think? Am I out there, or is this a feasible way around the law while staying legal? I've had talks with some manufacturers that say while it voids some warranties, it will in fact work with rifles. AAC said it would be okay and wouldn't violate warranty IF they were to make a .30 can that had that nut attached like their 5.56 does. Apparently, according to AAC, it won't clog up enough to worry about using a rifle with rifle ammo, 5.56 or .300BLK by the time the barrel is smoked.
Finally, any recommendations for cans that would suit this endeavor over others? What about reliable, yet light contour barrels, non-chromed?
Thanks for reading.
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