^ also, i can imagine a suppressor made for a .22 but used on a .223 would get blown to bits from the extreme pressure.
Yes, it prob wouldn't last more than a couple of rounds. Going the other way is bad too. Shooting a lot of 22 rimfire through a 223 suppressor causes the can to get plugged up with lead residue which buggers up the sound reduction.
Based on your knowledge of the suppressor community, and of suppressors themselves, what do you feel would be the best starting point to open the debate on their legality in Canada, or the path most likely successful for us to obtain what I feel is an essential health and safety tool?
I think a 2-pronged approach might be best.
A. There is no good reason to ban them. Most developed nations (many of those being more socialist leaning than Canada) allow civilian ownership. The reasons currently given to ban them in Canada are based on Hollywood and not reality. They are a valuable safety tool for both shooters and others in the area where shooting may occur.
Are we really less advanced than countries like New Zealand, S Africa, Finland, France and Britain?
B. Suppressors are the only effective means to tone down the noise made by shooting a firearm. They protect the user (when conventional ear based protection cannot), they protect people and animals in the area (where ear muffs do not) and they reduce noise pollution the same as a car muffler. They are also more friendly to the environment in that they trap a lot of lead.
In the UK they won the right to own suppressors based on the health and safety aspect. As someone posted earlier, the cost of hearing related damage in Canada is staggering. Suppressors are an inexpensive solution with no downsides.
Suppressor use in other countries has shown no increase in crime, murder or poaching as a result. The reason is that law abiding citizens do not suddenly turn into criminals just because they have access to a silencer ..... even if the lefties think they do.
What is it about this guy that terrifies lefties?