Nice Laz!I got a Sparrow since that was suppose to be the best .22 can. Its short, light and quiet but has more FRP than some of its brethren. It also has the clamshell over the monocore which helps with disassembly and cleaning.
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Nice Laz!I got a Sparrow since that was suppose to be the best .22 can. Its short, light and quiet but has more FRP than some of its brethren. It also has the clamshell over the monocore which helps with disassembly and cleaning.
Shut the front door! Give me back my setup.I got a Sparrow since that was suppose to be the best .22 can. Its short, light and quiet but has more FRP than some of its brethren. It also has the clamshell over the monocore which helps with disassembly and cleaning.
Hahaha! So do u guys prefer which metal? Al, ti, etc.? Also let me rephrase one of my questions, is there a .22 can that can be used on pistol and rifle setups and work equally efficiently on both?Shut the front door! Give me back my setup.
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the sparrow is good for that. Ti tube is fine, baffle choice is important. 22lr is dirty and leads to lead build up on baffles. For high volume shooting, I wouldnt want al baffles if nothing else but for cleaning. Theres more than one way to clean baffles but AL can be damaged more readily, also it cannot be dipped if that's your thing. Since I want these to last a lifetime, I went with the tougher yet heavier baffle of the sparrow. My next can will most likely have al baffles though.Hahaha! So do u guys prefer which metal? Al, ti, etc.? Also let me rephrase one of my questions, is there a .22 can that can be used on pistol and rifle setups and work equally efficiently on both?
Dobbs defense in Dallas, he's nonliberal on here. He's 150 on an aluminum can. $250 on steel. Very quiet. I have the aluminum one.I see a lot of u guys talk about the ARC22 can. That's a Dobbs can?
Hahaha! So do u guys prefer which metal? Al, ti, etc.? Also let me rephrase one of my questions, is there a .22 can that can be used on pistol and rifle setups and work equally efficiently on both?
Ah! Gotcha. So my first .22 can should have ti or ss baffles? Because I want it to last as long to a lifetime as possible also. That would be the sparrow?the sparrow is good for that. Ti tube is fine, baffle choice is important. 22lr is dirty and leads to lead build up on baffles. For high volume shooting, I wouldnt want al baffles if nothing else but for cleaning. Theres more than one way to clean baffles but AL can be damaged more readily, also it cannot be dipped if that's your thing. Since I want these to last a lifetime, I went with the tougher yet heavier baffle of the sparrow. My next can will most likely have al baffles though.