So, I head out to the range today, knowing full well it would be busy as a result of antelope season opening on Saturday. For a mid-week morning, it was even busier than I expected. I broke in the barrel on a couple rifles, did some tweaking, and was there for almost five hours. Over the course of that time, I was astounded how many guys showed up with big rifles and muzzle brakes.
I'm scratching my head on he muzzle brake idea. Not having one and trying to save what little is left of my hearing, maybe someone can explain it to me.
There was a common trait to the dozen guys I watched. All were guys much younger than me. So, this may be a generational issue parting somewhere south of my half-century mark. Every rifle was a synthetic stock and stainless. All of them carried "Hubble-type" scopes on them. Most the guys plopped down, cranked out five to eight shots, then started tinkering with the windage and elevation. Maybe a brake cools a barrel faster than non-braked barrels.
Not being in a hurry, when those guys were launching, I retreated back away from the line, not finding much value in the side-blast that the brakes emit. Not being on the bench, I walked along, looking at what these rifles were, caliber-wise. They were ALL .30 caliber super-juiced something or others.
From behind the line, with my spotter, I watched a few of the groups. Maybe it was the factory loads they were shooting. Maybe it was the scope. Maybe it was the trigger. None of them had groups any better than 2.5", with most I observed being closer to 3.0"+.
I guess I am struggling to understand the idea behind the brakes. From my anecdotal observations, I did not see any improvement in accuracy. Or, if that was improved accuracy, the guys there today probably should stick to shotguns.
I admit to my biases of being a rather traditional guy. That is why I am asking about these muzzle brakes that seemed in such great proliferation today.
What are the benefits these brakes provide, that is worth the ridiculous level of blast to anyone standing nearby? Obviously they have some benefit, or there would not be that many people investing in them. Is there any way to gain the benefits, without the crazy muzzle blast?
I suspect some here have them and can give me some insight. Since I am a .308 Win convert, more recently getting promiscuous with its 7mm-.08 sister, I doubt I'll ever have a brake on a rifle. But, who knows.
Also, please be careful out at the ranges. I think our range near Bozeman has some really good guys, is set up very well, and provides a safe shooting environment for all but the most foolhardy. Today, another fool started walking down range to hang targets when the firing line was hot. That is the second time this year I have seen people do that. Even when called out for his dangerous actions, he looked as though nothing was wrong.
Kind of freaked me out. I was on the sled, finger to the trigger, ready to fire, when the guy next to me started yelling to stand down. I looked up and the fool was about 40 yards down range, out in front of many live barrels. It would be hard to deal with being in an accident out there, even if it was the fault of some careless guy like that. Not sure if the guy was in such a hurry that he thought it was worth the risk to walk out to the 100 yard boards to hang his target, even with a dozen guys banging targets right next to him. Continued behavior like that is going to have a significant impact on his longevity.
I'm scratching my head on he muzzle brake idea. Not having one and trying to save what little is left of my hearing, maybe someone can explain it to me.
There was a common trait to the dozen guys I watched. All were guys much younger than me. So, this may be a generational issue parting somewhere south of my half-century mark. Every rifle was a synthetic stock and stainless. All of them carried "Hubble-type" scopes on them. Most the guys plopped down, cranked out five to eight shots, then started tinkering with the windage and elevation. Maybe a brake cools a barrel faster than non-braked barrels.
Not being in a hurry, when those guys were launching, I retreated back away from the line, not finding much value in the side-blast that the brakes emit. Not being on the bench, I walked along, looking at what these rifles were, caliber-wise. They were ALL .30 caliber super-juiced something or others.
From behind the line, with my spotter, I watched a few of the groups. Maybe it was the factory loads they were shooting. Maybe it was the scope. Maybe it was the trigger. None of them had groups any better than 2.5", with most I observed being closer to 3.0"+.
I guess I am struggling to understand the idea behind the brakes. From my anecdotal observations, I did not see any improvement in accuracy. Or, if that was improved accuracy, the guys there today probably should stick to shotguns.
I admit to my biases of being a rather traditional guy. That is why I am asking about these muzzle brakes that seemed in such great proliferation today.
What are the benefits these brakes provide, that is worth the ridiculous level of blast to anyone standing nearby? Obviously they have some benefit, or there would not be that many people investing in them. Is there any way to gain the benefits, without the crazy muzzle blast?
I suspect some here have them and can give me some insight. Since I am a .308 Win convert, more recently getting promiscuous with its 7mm-.08 sister, I doubt I'll ever have a brake on a rifle. But, who knows.
Also, please be careful out at the ranges. I think our range near Bozeman has some really good guys, is set up very well, and provides a safe shooting environment for all but the most foolhardy. Today, another fool started walking down range to hang targets when the firing line was hot. That is the second time this year I have seen people do that. Even when called out for his dangerous actions, he looked as though nothing was wrong.
Kind of freaked me out. I was on the sled, finger to the trigger, ready to fire, when the guy next to me started yelling to stand down. I looked up and the fool was about 40 yards down range, out in front of many live barrels. It would be hard to deal with being in an accident out there, even if it was the fault of some careless guy like that. Not sure if the guy was in such a hurry that he thought it was worth the risk to walk out to the 100 yard boards to hang his target, even with a dozen guys banging targets right next to him. Continued behavior like that is going to have a significant impact on his longevity.