I have been playing with my son's NEA 10.5" and 7.5" carbines. One of the first things I discovered was the muzzle blast. I was going to fire a single shot through each of them through a Chrony to see how much velocity was lost over the 14.5" barrel I usually shoot.
I fired one shot and the blast was painful. You may know the sharp pain and ringing sensation that tells you to stop if you don't want to do a lot of permanent damage.
Then I started trying out different muzzle devices. They made the blast even worse for the guy beside me.
Severl posters here suggested I try the S&J Linear compensator. I had (have) no idea what a "linear compensator" is, but today I tried one. I probably flinched when I touched it off, but the noise was dramatically reduced. No blast. No pain.
The device has 6 ports on the front, but no ports on the side. All the blast is projected forward. The result is a big reduction in noise to the shooter. The marks on the side are deep dimples (weight reduction, I assume).
One of the nice features of this layout is that there is no "UP" or "SIDE", so there is no indexing. Just screw it on and be done with it.
If you have a short barreled carbine and muzzle blast is an issue, this gizmo works. According to the S & J website, they have several models of this. Mine is 2". There is also a 1.5" model. The 2" works great on my carbines. I can see this being very valuable to police who can't just put on muff each time they shoot.
Quote form the S&J website:
Linear compensator is designed to direct the gas on a forward direction, away from the shooter. Its architecture has been improved from the classic layout of the linear compensator. As a result, the six side holes are no longer parallel with the bullet hole, but at a slight angle for a swirl effect. Also, the front end of the compensator is optimized to increase the effect of bullet stabilizing.
The outside diameter is .920",. At the rear there are 2 flats for wrench for easy installation
Threaded 1/2"-28tpi. CNC-machined out of steel, Matte black finish.
SLC-3 is the Standard Linear Comp with Dimpled finish 2.0 inch long
I fired one shot and the blast was painful. You may know the sharp pain and ringing sensation that tells you to stop if you don't want to do a lot of permanent damage.
Then I started trying out different muzzle devices. They made the blast even worse for the guy beside me.
Severl posters here suggested I try the S&J Linear compensator. I had (have) no idea what a "linear compensator" is, but today I tried one. I probably flinched when I touched it off, but the noise was dramatically reduced. No blast. No pain.
The device has 6 ports on the front, but no ports on the side. All the blast is projected forward. The result is a big reduction in noise to the shooter. The marks on the side are deep dimples (weight reduction, I assume).
One of the nice features of this layout is that there is no "UP" or "SIDE", so there is no indexing. Just screw it on and be done with it.
If you have a short barreled carbine and muzzle blast is an issue, this gizmo works. According to the S & J website, they have several models of this. Mine is 2". There is also a 1.5" model. The 2" works great on my carbines. I can see this being very valuable to police who can't just put on muff each time they shoot.
Quote form the S&J website:
Linear compensator is designed to direct the gas on a forward direction, away from the shooter. Its architecture has been improved from the classic layout of the linear compensator. As a result, the six side holes are no longer parallel with the bullet hole, but at a slight angle for a swirl effect. Also, the front end of the compensator is optimized to increase the effect of bullet stabilizing.
The outside diameter is .920",. At the rear there are 2 flats for wrench for easy installation
Threaded 1/2"-28tpi. CNC-machined out of steel, Matte black finish.
SLC-3 is the Standard Linear Comp with Dimpled finish 2.0 inch long
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