The mount design is fully licensed from Dead Air, therefore customer's suppressor warranty remains unaffected. For the first time shooters can now enjoy advanced weapon control with the ability to mount the entire range of Dead Air Sandman KEYMO silencers to their firearms. Full auto fire is possible with massively reduced recoil and muzzle climb, meaning that all shots fall on target. Its unique Short Energy Pulse system reduces length of recoil so that repeating shot energy cannot overlap and knock the shooter off target. Seems like there are more and more flow through cans coming on the market as of late.Manufactured to the highest quality standards and featuring a patented design, the LANTAC DGN556B-DA Muzzle Brake offers improved recoil management and muzzle rise over competitors' products. Can't compare to the other two options you mentioned though. I do know, when shooting 5.56, bystanders are always surprised it's a 7.62 can. Ultimately for me personally, I wanted no changes to the rifles can on or off and it tames all three calibers very well for my needs but others may feel differently. It's also safe to drop in an ultrasonic cleaner. I built a cleaning container out of PVC pipe with a removable lid on one end and capped/sealed on the other. I soak it in M7 Pro for 24 hours, drain, then shoot out anything leftover. I've toyed with doing a 12.5" upper on my. It's nice and tidy on the 300 blackout which has either an 8.5" or 10.5" barrel (currently the latter). It's not mentioned in any of the info on-site either. I asked when I first purchased mine and I'm pretty sure they said no barrel length restrictions. I don't think there's a barrel length restriction on the OSS though. Overall, the OSS Ti is relatively short and light (14.7 oz for the old non-flash hider version) and the new version has a flash suppressor. They do have a wrench available now which isn't included as far as I know. Makes getting it off super easy and 99% of the time, without a tool. Screw on the can, finger tight, and you're good to go. Other than what's been mentioned above, the way the gas exits the suppressor keeps the can on. I use my OSS 762 Ti on three different gas guns in. The Mini2 762 will accept both 556 and 762 muzzle devices as the external geometry is the same (but the 762 is longer, so not backwards compatible). And, all your guns can have Surefire SOCOM muzzle devices. It has the same footprint as the 556 RC SOCOM, but will also accept 6.5 and 7.62 hosts. We have been selling a lot of 762 Mini2 lately. I won't diverge into other options and confuse you with more choices, although CGS is very intriguing. But Surefire and DeadAir are always in the top 5 of our selections. We sell Surefire and DeadAir, and some other really innovative brands. One you did not mention is the Surefire 762 Mini2. The Nomad can adapt different caps for 556, 6.5 and 762, and is a good choice. The RC2 is going to be heavy and solid and only 5.56. The Nomad is somewhat of a go-to if you cannot decide, and so is the RC2. It ties you into the DA family of muzzle devices, or you can get the Nomad and use an adapter or direct thread. The KeyMo is not a suppressor but an adapter. The OSS is pretty solid, and new technology. Some good choices, and great advice already. KeyMo is extremely appealing because I wouldn't be married to one suppressor and have a lot more options for muzzle devices, IE I could get my favorite muzzle device and then decide which suppressor(s) I like the most. OSS is really appealing for the decent flash reduction, can use it on more than just an AR and low impact parts due to less blowback, I see myself getting the 762 ti can. I like the surefire for the flash suppression, but would likely be a dedicated 556 can only for ARs, but the trainer and blank firing adapter are great for training. Pros: Can use a 13.7 / 13.9 barrel, widest options for suppressor and muzzle device choicesĬons: Weight (due to keymo adapter), blowback (depends on suppressor) Pros: Little to no blowback, weight (ti model), will work with non-ARs I get down the road (especially if I opt for the 762 ti can), less part wear due to little to no blowbackĬons: Would need to go with a 14.5" barrel, terrible flash from footage I've seen even with the flash hider models Pros: Flash suppression w/ and w/o the can, durability, trainers and blank firing adapter is a big plus, can use a 13.7 / 13.9" barrel One that's a cheapo built and another ultralight. This is going on a 556, but I do plan on getting 6MM ARC and 300BLK down the road including that I have a 22lr. Finally pulled the budget together for the rest of my dream rifle build and am a bit torn on the muzzle device.
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