No. None of our tubes leaked. One of my friends smoked a high end brand that came in aluminum tubes, with internally threaded aluminum caps.I know of guys shutting down a mercury tower. The liquid #### wouldn't be much of an issue. It's the gases, so were told.
Do you think the mercury could gas out of the cigar container in the butt stock ?
When the firearm recoils, the mercury slams up against the front of the tube, reducing recoil. If it's already there, it just adds as extra weight on the rifle and reduces recoil like any other weight added to the stock.Are you saying that the mercury needs to be away from the front of the tube when the gun is fired? If so, how is that physics working? I am really trying to wrap my brain around this.
This ^^^^^ exactly. That is why proper installation is parallel with bottom of buttstock! Use to be quite popular in target shotguns.When the firearm recoils, the mercury slams up against the front of the tube, reducing recoil. If it's already there, it just adds as extra weight on the rifle and reduces recoil like any other weight added to the stock.
That is why I called it a bit gimicky. There is no way to actually measure any recoil reduction. It's a 'felt' thing. There used to be a sprung weight that claimed it did the same thing. If it 'feels' like it helps, it helps in most minds... but is it mostly the added weight or the method?Is the movement of the mercury in the tube/cylinder actually helping in recoil reduction or is it's weight only dictating the recoil ?
Interesting. Thank you.When the firearm recoils, the mercury slams up against the front of the tube, reducing recoil. If it's already there, it just adds as extra weight on the rifle and reduces recoil like any other weight added to the stock.
When the firearm recoils, the mercury slams up against the front of the tube, reducing recoil. If it's already there, it just adds as extra weight on the rifle and reduces recoil like any other weight added to the stock.
I know muzzle brakes are most likely more effective, but they are really noisy and had 1.5 to 2” to the overall length of the rifle, both things I don’t care for!In my experience from the 70's, this style of recoil suppression was more popular in trap shooting than in rifles.
Today if you want reduced recoil in a rifle, a muzzle brake is much more effective.
So if I have a good recoil pad and a mercury tube, both combine it should even be better right?!?! Like if you add a muzzle break on top of those two even better… I would think that one doesn’t cancel the other.I had one of these gizmos, which I believe was sold way back when for use in shotguns. I played with it in a couple rifles, and specifically remember reading to mount it parallel to the bottom line of the stock, so that's exactly what I did.
As stated above, it was supposed to spread the recoil impact out over a longer interval, making it feel less punishing; a push rather than a punch. I convinced myself that it seemed to be working, but I am also convinced that a quality recoil pad is better.
And if you are the least bit OCD...lemme tell ya, I found the feel and sound of the liquid sloshing around in the stock while carrying and handling it unbearable. I took it out after a while, stuck it in a drawer, let it "age" a few years or decades, and then sold it on the EE.![]()
Makes sense to me, but I don't think I actually tried all the combinations to confirm.So if I have a good recoil pad and a mercury tube, both combine it should even be better right?!?! Like if you add a muzzle break on top of those two even better… I would think that one doesn’t cancel the other.
Can we admit that you're being just a tad obtuse with that statement...Centerfire rifles are noisy. A muzzle brake does not increase the noise level.
Centerfire rifles are noisy. A muzzle brake does not increase the noise level.



























