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TonytheTiger

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Posts posted by TonytheTiger

  1. 90% of a rifles accuracy comes from the barrel (and ammo of course, but we're talking about the gun part of the equation I assume) and the other 10% probably comes from a combination of everything else being tight, assembled properly and all the parts fitting well. If the bolt is in spec and headspaced properly it should have no effect on accuracy, negative or otherwise.

     

    You could handload and tune ammo to your PSA barrel and you might find it to be spectacularly accurate. Or you might not. A quality barrel isn't a guarantee of great accuracy but it stacks the deck in your favor and is more likely to shoot with a variety of loads rather than needing a specially tuned one. 

     

    But 100% of the burden of getting an AR to shoot to its potential is on the shooter. Since you said you're a newbie, it's very likely your technique is leaving a lot of performance on the table. AR's require very good fundamentals to shoot consistently small groups.

  2. On 11/19/2022 at 10:59 PM, mSNACKS said:

    Mostly 3 but a lot of people zero their gun like 2 bc it is easier to be accurate at difficult shots ie far distance, partials etc

    True story. I saw a lot of 10-12" plates beyond 60 yards in the last season of 3 gun. I hate to think about where I would have to hold if I zeroed with sight picture #1 at close range and #3 would obscure the target completely. 

  3. 21 hours ago, inertia said:

     Also check out the apa answer it's also very good and comes with the top ports tapped with screws which I love 

    On my first Hypertap I drilled the holes out and tapped them for plugs, effectively copying the Answer design. I wanted to be able to test and reverse any changes I made. My next Hypertap I just drilled them out since I knew what I wanted at that point.

  4. I can't spend five minutes at a match without hearing constant Honcho horror stories from friends, former owners and complete strangers. Then we get to the CS. I've seen screenshots of how that goes. Wouldn't give the company a penny just based on that. 

    Having shot one, they are very nice. And very oily. And in the hands of many shooters, very prone to doubling.

  5. 7 hours ago, mpeltier said:

    Of the rear gassing brakes Ive tried, the Hypertap is good. I stick to my JP comp for my game gun though. I am not a fan of the distracting concussive nature of the Hypertap. Side by side I can tell no difference in shooting performance, but I need to blow my nose after shooting the Hypertap. 

    Just goes to show our setups, techniques and bodies are all different. I find the Hypertap to be minimally conclusive, even compared to flat baffled brakes.

  6. On 1/6/2023 at 3:36 PM, DukeNiemand said:

    Thanks for the info! That's kind of surprising to hear that the Hypertap is more effective at reducing recoil than the Apollo Max, despite the latter being much larger profile. Testament to the Hypertap's design I guess.

    Yeah, kinda surprising, but the more brakes I test the more I think a bowl shaped baffle surface is more effective at capturing gasses than the aggressively back-angled but flat baffle surfaces of brakes like the Apollo.

  7. The TTI mags have no provision for coupling, are smooth and slippery on the bottom, and the angle isn't great for monopodding. I use the TTI extensions on my primary mags, just not if I see myself going prone on a stage. The TF bases are a better shape and have an aggressive texture that really grips well on almost any surface.

  8. No experience with the new Titan. Own the Hypertap and Apollo Max, prefer the Hypertap. Smaller, slightly less recoil, tunable and way less blast.

    But I also have the Unrivaled brake. Very tunable and right with the Hypertap in recoil reduction and blast, but way bigger/heavier.

    All of the above are more effective than the last generation brakes, of which I have many, but only if you have a keen sense for such things. 99% of shooters I hand my rifles to can't tell any difference.

     

    The M4-72's rate very high in effectiveness, but it's also the only brake I've taken out of service and probably won't ever use again. And I'm not blast sensitive, it's just that horrible.

  9. If the bullet is running into the rifling you'll see evidence of it on the bullet. The Amax is a pretty secant ogive so you typically don't have trouble hitting lands unless loaded really long. More likely is that the shoulder isn't bumped back far enough. You'll have to compare shoulder locations. You could also black marker the whole case and see if it shows where the stickiness is happening.

  10. 18 minutes ago, X5SigChris said:

    So. If it were a headspace issue. Simple solution would be to shim the barrel one way or another depending on how it gauges correct. Now I’m second guessing myself 

    No. That's not how AR barrels work. Assuming the bolt is in spec about all you can do is hand turn a chamber reamer to your desired headspace. I've done it on a couple tight chambered AR15 barrels that needed to be able to eat any and all ammo. Definitely rule out gas and ammo issues before this though.

  11. I'd start with gas block alignment then headspace. Also, does an unfired round eject easily.

     

    Edit: just refreshed and saw more info in the posts after the OP. Sounds like you're headed in the right direction.

  12. Modified or something similar has been pretty common at matches around me this last season. It's off to a slow start but I'm sure it'll catch on. It hasn't meaningfully changed the scores of those participating from where they would normally place in TO. 

     

    I initially had a negative opinion of it, for no real reason other than the standard dislike of change and the "watering down" of divisions.

    A year later and I have a neutral opinion. I'm glad they didn't shoehorn dots into TO.

     

    If it saves 3 gun from extinction great. I don't see that happening. 

  13. 49 minutes ago, shred said:

    I wouldn't be surprised if the same thing is happening in 3 gun when the noob sees they'll probably need to rework their rifle, get a new rifle scope and comp, find one of the right shotguns and grind it to quad-load, get extension tubes, chest rig and all that and just moves on without giving it much of a shake.  If there was a way to keep them around longer, maybe more would stay.

     

     

    Yes and no. A purpose built rifle or 3 second quads will help. As in, help you get from an upper mid packer to an 80 percenter.

    Most of the new guys I RO are forgetting half the targets and going to war mag dumping on 12" plates at 100 yards. They don't need any special equipment yet. 

     They get discouraged by this and somehow their takeaway is usually to blame all their failures on not having Honcho money or not having a Dissident.

    Like I said, the desire to get better by self analysis is missing with the new crowd.

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