Erik Cortina Tuner
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JC,
Tuners are not popular around my way, even among the bench resters. Results are inconsistent relative to far more influential variables. It is difficult to isolate shooting variables to see how much, if any, influence a tuner has on the rifle.
If you are shooting an AR or even a standard bolt gun I would save your money. You will be end up in confirmatory bias wondering whether it was the tuner that caused the bullet to go where it did.
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Tuners are nothing new.
I think Remington even had a rifle with a tuner on it.
Looked something like this.
Tuners can have a humongous effect.
Shoot 3 rounds, remove your flash-hider, shoot three rounds, add a muzzle brake, shoot three more rounds.
I guarantee your three groups will be in three distinct locations.
When I removed my pepper-pot muzzle brake from a Mauser action 35 Whelen I had a 3 inch vertical shift at 50 yards!
It is the same concept.
All a tuner is doing is shifting a weight at the end of your barrel to change how it vibrates when the cartridge deflagrates.
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Happy,
I think we have different definitions of what a tuner is.
I absolutely agree that shooting with or without a suppressor changes the MPI and increases velocity. The added weight on the barrel and influence on the exiting gasses is profound. Same with, and without a muzzle brake and it's influence on how exiting gasses influence the bullet and barrel rise. Big differences to barrel weight and gas direction has a noticeable effect.
But a tuner is different. Plenty of discussion online about whether they work or not for the reading. I saw one F Class shooter with a heavy match rifle over a few months use one and eventually take it off because it made no noticeable improvement in groups.
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Be careful using any muzzle device... For accuracy, I won't torque any higher than 15 foot pounds. The torque will actually compress the barrel that can be measured with a muzzle erosion gauge..The higher the torque, the higher the compression..This is why barrels that require a high torque setting with a suppressor will have un-even bore wear at the muzzle and will be less accurate over time when the suppressor is removed..
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Originally posted by Klem View PostHappy,
I think we have different definitions of what a tuner is.
I absolutely agree that shooting with or without a suppressor changes the MPI and increases velocity. The added weight on the barrel and influence on the exiting gasses is profound. Same with, and without a muzzle brake and it's influence on how exiting gasses influence the bullet and barrel rise. Big differences to barrel weight and gas direction has a noticeable effect.
But a tuner is different. Plenty of discussion online about whether they work or not for the reading. I saw one F Class shooter with a heavy match rifle over a few months use one and eventually take it off because it made no noticeable improvement in groups.
I suspect the effects of using a barrel tuner are similar to the technique of adjusting seating depth. Sometimes it really does work, and other times you were already at the best you could do and you make it worse.
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Originally posted by montana View PostBe careful using any muzzle device... For accuracy, I won't torque any higher than 15 foot pounds. The torque will actually compress the barrel that can be measured with a muzzle erosion gauge..The higher the torque, the higher the compression..This is why barrels that require a high torque setting with a suppressor will have un-even bore wear at the muzzle and will be less accurate over time when the suppressor is removed..
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Not much more to explain that what I stated before..Torque on muzzle threads compresses the bore...The more the torque, the more the compression.. Anyone with a muzzle erosion gauge can verify this...Measure the bore before and after torquing any muzzle device...
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Originally posted by Happy2ShootMontana I am having a difficult time visualizing the force that compresses the muzzle. The threads pull back in the direction the muzzle, but are stopped by the thread-barrel-shoulder with proper undercut. I don't doubt it, especially if it can be measured with with gage pins. Could you explain it?
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The forces I have experienced came from using a crush washer. Since the washer does not align totally concentric and since it deforms (radial-wise) non-uniformly, it puts a non-concentric force on both the muzzle device and the barrel-tip. For any muzzle device I now use either an accuwasher system or jam nut to keep everything uniform around the bore and barrel."Down the floor, out the door, Go Brandon Go!!!!!"
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