I was wondering if there is any real advantage in getting one of these, would there be a noticable difference in performance.

avatar
![]()
Yes there are advantages and changes in performance.
Advantages -
Cooler chamber, cleaner chamber and bolt environment (less maintenance more reliability).
Faster cycling (good for a race gun).
Piston is a great marketing method -- especially when one can fire coming out of the water (despite water obscuring your optic).
We have done piston guns, and are of the opinion the negatives are not worth the few advantages.
Faster cycling?
Is this the part where you intended to say piston guns beat the hell out of bolts and barrel extensions? Or were you hinting at the issues HK is having keeping firing pins inside their carriers?
No?
![]()
The cyclic rate of the 416 is the same as DI rifles so I am not tracking where you were heading..........

The piston gun always does quicker double taps.
Not much faster, but enough to matter in competition.
I have an Adams Arms piston gun with a high round count and the bolt and barrel extension look like new.There are NO mechanical problems or premature wear areas.
We have tested it in comparison to D.I. guns using an IPSC timer with various operators.
The piston gun always does quicker double taps.
Not much faster, but enough to matter in competition.
You may disagree - I am just sharing my experiences rather than conventional theory or opinion.
![]()
I have an Adams Arms piston gun with a high round count and the bolt and barrel extension look like new.There are NO mechanical problems or premature wear areas.
I believe the only time there would be an advantage would be on a dedicated piston design, like the HK, and then I would say the advantages would only crop up if you were running a suppressor.



























