Just ordered a 13.5x1 threaded barrel and compensator for my HKP30
I have not filed for a tax stamp nor researched suppressor prices, how retarded am I?
pic related but not my gun
>>34615864
It's your money
>>34615864
you did fine, 13.5x1 LH pistons only cost like $40-$60 generally
>>34615864
Enjoy waiting 2 years
>>34619524
>yfw SHUSH passes in three months and threaded barrels for everything go out of stock
>he doesn't know about HK using different recoil assemblies on guns designed to run with cans
>>34619600
elaborate
>>34619564
>Expecting anything from a Trump Administration.
Be honest, do you post green frogs on Twitter?
>>34619934
Not sure how it is for the newer guns but there were USP owners on the HKpro forums who beat their guns to death by using cans without changing out the stock recoil assemblies.
They contacted HK and confirmed that the USP Tacticals (and any other that came standard with threaded barrels) came from the factory with recoil assemblies specifically designed to work with suppressors.
I'd look into it more.
>>34620005
good to know, I'll do some research into the p30
>>34619956
shoo shoo /pol/ster
>>34620005
this is not unique to HKs - suppressors trap the expelled gasses and mosdef increase recoil impulse on the slide.
When you pick up brass fired on the hush it's dirty as fuck, the fouling is literally pushing back into the guts of your gun.
A heavier mainsrping tuned for a can is never a poor choice, sequitur logic requires me to point out this is why gas adjustment systems exist on long guns.
All that said, these are baby handgats and 3 simple solutions spring (yuck yuck) to mind:
1) replace the mainspring at twice the rate
2) buy aftermarket/OEM heavier spring
3) don't shoot hot loads (or more specifically shoot loads designed for suppression)
If you were to ignore all of the remedies and continue normal shooting habits with a can, yes you would see increased wear, but please think of that in a relative fashion. Case and point, I'd love it if a single member of /k/ who owns cans can share their anecdotal experience of bricking their gun because of 1-3 lbs of spring weight - which is already in a state of variance considering the condition of any said sample firearm and rounds down range.
This is very reminiscent of "40 will wear your gun out", which btw guys, back in the 80s was "fmj will wear your barrel out" (compared to the more common cast loads just prior to autoloader frenzy)
(still waiting on that guy who oh-so-regrets the 40 because it wore his gun out in a financially meaningful way)
https://youtu.be/NVdPhWmKCes