![]() ![]() Hence a 3.3 oz can that when filled with lithium is astonishingly quiet for its size. Size was as important an issue as suppression and accuracy. When suppressors for your pistol were first designed for the armed forces, the idea was clandestine use, far fewer rounds suppressed than the typical YouTube video fest. If you are expecting to shot less, say 10-50 rounds and you want an equally quiet can and are willing to take the time to go wet, well your can dimensions (and the design to some degree) changes dramatically. Now we could take about what works better as there are a number of solutions that work well and very differently. That and some people, including myself dont want water. Water works, it works well, but it is the shortest lasting of all ablatives. In the old days, people would dip, essentially dipping their cans into water as they shot to cool the can and provide the effects of a "wet" environment. Those cans are typically larger, much larger, both to take the heat and to allow the operator to not have to stop to apply an ablative. If the idea is to go to the range and bang away all day, say 50 or 250 rounds and you want every round suppressed, well then you need a can that is based on volume and good baffle design. Look, the issue with pistol cans is one of actual use. Great question, the answer is no, but the performance is not as good. Re: DO you need the booster with a Beretta 92? ![]()
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