View Full Version : I Got To Shoot One Of These Today
Jeff '79
10-05-2012, 8:39pm
And my hand and wrist are killing me...The pistol grip, from the hip really hurts after 3 shots.... Nice bedroom gun though..:seasix:
MOSSBERG 12GA. STANDOFF $306.00 SHIPS FREE (http://www.budsgunshop.com/catalog/product_info.php/cPath/37_336/products_id/411551115)
http://i999.photobucket.com/albums/af113/jeff79/Mmossberg500.jpg
http://i999.photobucket.com/albums/af113/jeff79/mossberg-500-thunder-shotgun-b.jpg
http://i999.photobucket.com/albums/af113/jeff79/Persuader.jpg
Burro (He/Haw)
10-05-2012, 8:42pm
Nice bedroom gun though.
Your's not working?
http://carolynthomas.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/viagra2.gif
You're welcome. :cert:
:D
Torqaholic
10-05-2012, 9:28pm
I don't think I have a use for one of those :D
Kerrmudgeon
10-05-2012, 9:31pm
What's with the serrated muzzel?? Do you stab the guy with it when you run out of shells??:rofl:
Jeff '79
10-05-2012, 9:32pm
What's with the serrated muzzel?? Do you stab the guy with it when you run out of shells??:rofl:
Yes....In the groin area.
NEVRL8T
10-05-2012, 9:34pm
What's with the serrated muzzel?? Do you stab the guy with it when you run out of shells??:rofl:
I have one on my 7mm Mag. It's a brake. They do wonders.
Muzzle brake - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
My Browning BAR Safari II came with the BOSS system but I had it removed and had a traditional brake installed. I never really cared for dialing in the BOSS and they can be finicky. My brake is military grade and the shiznitt for precision. I hunt a pipeline and 450 yards is not uncommon to shoot. At that distance and the wind gusting down the pipeline, it can be tricky figuring windage and elevation and sometimes I need a quick second shot or even a third.
My muzzle brake looks like this but it's much bigger and my barrel does not have elevation front sights anymore.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/88/358rgrmzebae.jpg
Jeff '79
10-05-2012, 9:37pm
I have one (sort of -) on my 7mm Mag. It's a brake. They do wonders.
Muzzle brake - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muzzle_brake)
I'm thinking the muzzle can be dug into a door, and then when the gun is discharged, it ain't goin' anywhere, but the door is.
Torqaholic
10-05-2012, 9:37pm
Seems I've heard that muzzle design is for opening doors. Supposed theory is you stick it on the door angled toward the lock mechanism and pull the trigger.
FasterTraffic
10-05-2012, 9:37pm
I don't think I have a use for one of those :D
You've never had someone close the bathroom door with the lock engaged?
Torqaholic
10-05-2012, 9:43pm
You've never had someone close the bathroom door with the lock engaged?
Sure but they also get out of my way when I tell them to move :lol:
NEVRL8T
10-05-2012, 9:45pm
I'm thinking the muzzle can be dug into a door, and then when the gun is discharged, it ain't goin' anywhere, but the door is.
Seems I've heard that muzzle design is for opening doors. Supposed theory is you stick it on the door angled toward the lock mechanism and pull the trigger.
Not hardly. Myth. It's nothing more than a brake.
Torqaholic
10-05-2012, 9:46pm
Let me rephrase that.
When I "ask" them to move... I always ask (the first time) :D
ConstantChange
10-05-2012, 9:47pm
I've been wanting a Mossberg 500 for awhile now. I just need to take the time to do it.
No pistol grip for me though.
ConstantChange
10-05-2012, 9:48pm
What's with the serrated muzzel?? Do you stab the guy with it when you run out of shells??:rofl:
Honestly, it's probably just great marketing. It makes it a "tactical" gun. :rofl:
NEVRL8T
10-05-2012, 9:49pm
I just realized what you all are talking about. Yes, that's a breacher barrel. That keeps the barrel from sliding around when you put it against a door. You don't want to dig the barrel into the door though. Also, you really don't want to do this unless you know what you are doing and you need breacher rounds to do it. Regular slugs or buckshot will cause you some problems if you try it. Only the M-1030 ammo should be used. And no, there are no civilian rounds for this.
Jeff '79
10-05-2012, 9:52pm
I just realized what you all are talking about. Yes, that's a breacher barrel. That keeps the barrel from sliding around when you put it against a door. You don't want to dig the barrel into the door though. Also, you really don't want to do this unless you know what you are doing and you need breacher rounds to do it. Regular slugs or buckshot will cause you some problems if you try it. Only the M-1030 ammo should be used.
The slots disperse the muzzle blast allowing one to dig it into the door. It's serrated for just that purpose. I prolly would never find the need to breach a door, but it does look bad ass...
NEVRL8T
10-05-2012, 9:58pm
The slots disperse the muzzle blast allowing one to dig it into the door. It's serrated for just that purpose. I prolly would never find the need to breach a door, but it does look bad ass...
That's part of it but the slots biggest job is the muzzle brake. The Persuader is a multifunction defense and utility weapon. The slots are really for the brake because of the recoil and precisely the reason you said early. Three shots and your wrists were hurting. The concave grooves on the breacher actually would be sufficient to let the gas out to keep the barrel from possibly exploding or ramming it back into your teeth. Obviously the brake could be more sufficient. Thanks for the input!
Torqaholic
10-05-2012, 10:00pm
Not hardly. Myth. It's nothing more than a brake.
He was referring to the serrations on the crown. I doubt those have a braking effect. Plenty of muzzle brakes don't have those.
Jeff '79
10-05-2012, 10:04pm
That's part of it but the slots biggest job is the muzzle brake. The Persuader is a multifunction defense and utility weapon. The slots are really for the brake because of the recoil and precisely the reason you said early. Three shots and your wrists were hurting. The concave grooves on the breacher actually would be sufficient to let the gas out to keep the barrel from possibly exploding or ramming it back into your teeth. Obviously the brake could be more sufficient. Thanks for the input!
I wonder how it would have felt w/o the brake? It still had a pretty good kick, but now that I think about it, not as bad as my Remington 870 Express.
I like the concept of a pistol grip, making the gun nice and short, for possible house clearing. I wonder if they sell padded grips for it though, to minimize hand fatigue....
Rapid Roger
10-05-2012, 10:06pm
What's with the serrated muzzel?? Do you stab the guy with it when you run out of shells??:rofl:
Those are the famous "Strike Bezels",which I have been mocking for years here and at the other place.....:)
ConstantChange
10-05-2012, 10:12pm
I prolly would never find the need to breach a door, but it does look bad ass...
You and the other 99% of people that own one. It's marketing genius. Like you said, it's bad ass and I want it too! :dance:
NEVRL8T
10-05-2012, 10:26pm
He was referring to the serrations on the crown. I doubt those have a braking effect. Plenty of muzzle brakes don't have those.
True but you aren't going to bury the crown 1/4" into what ever you are breaching. Stick the crown into a hardened door, you will still get plenty of clearance for the gas to escape around through the convex slits in the tip. Forget the brake slits on the brake before the breaching point. Imagine that part was solid, you still get gas escape portals from the teeth cut in the crown.
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