No... I watched to the end as well. I guess we will all have to 'discover' what size PVC we need to start with. Didn't say or show if it was Schedule 40 or Schedule 80 PVC, but my guess is 40. Oh well, will take measurements myself and go from there. Nice to see just what was used for everything. Would loved to have seen how effective it is.
@@halweiss8671 It's meant for an airgun. If you watch some of other vids on his channel, it shows him building his own airgun. The suppressor is designed specifically for that gun.
Well if you know anything about firearms and temps, you should know this is good for about 10 shots max of a .22 at best. Can’t really call it a suppressor for anything else
Im 57, and my father made them from a Briggs and Stratton lawn mower mufflers, basically the threading back then was the problem the muffler already came threaded, but, they worked better than the ones you can actually buy
I started playing paintball in 1986, back then we had to make all of our own accessories, I made silencers exactly like this. They worked well for paintball, I would never try them on a real firearm.
Oil filters make great silencers...The longer the quieter...The female threaded inlet, will fit specific threaded nipples...You secure the nipple to your piece, I silver soldered mine, on an HP .22, extended barrel, after removing some of the sleeve, over the barrel...It's cast or pot metal, melts easy too, so be careful...Then just shoot the first round through for the end hole, and you have a replaceable silencer...Sounds like a cap gun...Longer filters even quieter...
@@teddyrasputin3850 as big as the hole was it would have to be a 100 caliber . And with no baffle in front to slow down the gas it won't work because the hole is to big in the front
Beautiful work as usual. Works very well with high pressure gases like n-gas, etc. Absolutely love your design. Nice work. +1 a chamber inside a chamber with inlets.. for which the gases will go into as the projectile passes w/the high pressure gases directly behind it.. this works in physics. nice work. A+
I like the concept of using whatever you have or can buy at the hardware store. The design is kind of like a glass pack muffler, doubt it would reduce the decibels much. I do like your hacksaw frame built from rebar.
Check this one i just made, even simpler but it works because of the smooth internals and the corresponding volume/area changes. Plus the simple action of a end of a (right kind of) bottle acting as a orifice plate.
Great idea but those materials will almost surely melt and/or catch fire at much above a .22lr when exposed to repeated, rapid firings (note there was no attempt to validate its capabilities in actual use). The most fragile suppressor material I've yet to see is aluminum; there's a valid reason.
Its not meant for rapid fire ........ and it wont work with a 22 lr either. The out put hole needs to be much smaller to hold back the gasses / noise. Nothing about this will work. I get greats results using plastic coke bottle with my 22 lr.
That stuff doesnt easily catch fire when held in actual fire, I believe the issue will be like "barrel droop" after a couple hundred rounds by overheating.
Tri bolt I remember now,the actual thread cap was steal, the spring loaded locking divots were brass,as the paint came off and we were able to see the yellow brass color anyway again very cool
It’ll work on a 22 caliber if you shoot bullets below about 1100 fps. The hardest part would be keeping the tube perfectly straight, in-line with the bullet travel. Keeping the bullet from making any contact with the inside tube, deflecting it. Perfect alignment could be a problem with an inner tube that small. Bullets over 1080 or 1100 fps you’d get a secondary boom coming from the bullet breaking the sound barrier.
Not really, because there is no isolation between the inlet and outlet to control the difference between escaping gas ahead of the sonic pop. This would only act like a glass pack muffler to some degree, not a suppressor. The reason an adapter from the barrel to a screw on oil filter actually works is the small hole shot through the end allows the expanding gas to stay trapped long enough to become neutral as the projectile goes through the small hole at the end. This open PVC contraption has little to no purpose.
All the holes in the inner tube let the gasses out. Yes, same as a muffler. You know, The same fellow that invented the gun silencer invented the car muffler.
@@user-bd5md5cm2j PVC is good to 385 degrees before it deforms, the barrel will get hot faster than the PVC because it doesn't retain heat well. This is assuming that it's attached to a 22 Cal single shot rifle, and not a fully automatic of extreme firing capabilities.
It is probably worth mentioning that civilian firearms are illegal where this dude lives. All they got over there are air guns, and most of them are home made. This is a tutorial on how to build a suppressor for such a gun. If you believe putting one of these on an actual firearm is a bad idea, you a correct. It is.
Prescription pill bottles the kind that can snap together clear orange colored with holes drilled in center, insert scotch brite or steel wool wrapped around a pencil which is used as a guage for hole size electric tape and super glue them as a monocore baffle inserted into a maglite flash light body for the can.. tightly wrapping duct tape on the end of 22 barrel so the can fits really tight when put on and as long as you dont mag dump a ruger 10-22 all you really hear is the reciever ejecting the casing but if you rapidly empty your mag its only good for about 4-5 rounds then heats up and fudgea up alignment and you're monocore pill bottle baffle is done,, of course this is all hypothetical and ive nwver made a surppressor for a ruger 10-22
This design could be improved by making more room for more of the media(cotton or something synthetic?) and changing it to fine steel wool, which would last much longer.
Who ever thinks this would quiet a 22 lr sub is dead wrong this original style needs a center tube baffle slightly larger then bullet caliber, needs an end cap, the stuffing between center baffle tube and can should be steel wool lathered up with bearing grease and pvs tubing doesn't hold sound worth a crap..
I've got a damn pellet gun in .177 cal and that sumbich is LOUD! Louder that all of my 22LR's for sure. Only 1 pump and CRACK... which kinda sucks LOL. I think it's about 1,300 FPS which is more that common 22LR but it's close in either case. I think THIS item would suit it very well and I may try something similar to this as I think it'll work fine for an air rifle. Nice little tutorial vid and like many others have stated, killer rebar hacksaw!
It wouldn't make any real difference other than sending the blast sound down range like a blast forwarding device (BFD). As tight as the packing is between the ported tube and the outer chamber it wouldn't quite or "silence" any combustion fired device. You may as well tape a go-kart muffler to your muzzle if you want to go to jail for attempting to create a suppressor that has no reduction in sound.
First off...ONLY way it wouldn't explode on first shot is if ONLY USED ON A .22LR. Then there's not going to be any appreciable sound reduction overall because it's open ended. Need a wipe or cap to trap the gasses or it'll simply be a redirection device. The sound may be attenuated from the shooter's perspective but that's only because it was redirected.
Despite all the "Call of Duty" commandos' negative opinions this thing could work. It is OBVIOUSLY not designed for AR15 heavy combat! Too bad that in this context it cannot be tested.🤣
For a 22. Rifle A 20oz mountain dew bottle filled with 00# steel wool and duct taped over the barrel would "probably" work really well, especially with Subs. Don't test this idea!! But remember it
(6:34) Some say, Sam Worthington after watching this, built one on the same day Peter Jackson cast him for the role of Jake Sully (J'ache Sooly). Some say...
I did something like this (not as detailed as this one) and it worked for the first shot. I didn't secure the dampening layer (I used sponges) and on the 2nd shot it all went flying out. Told myself I'd try again but just got busy with other stuff. Also my module was twice a thick and probably a 15" long.
Yes I was waiting for the demo. Ive always felt that the hardest part to a silencer was getting the extended threaded barrel. Where do those come from?
I think the hardest part is finding a barrel thread to fit exactly Like it's supposed to I think plumbing pipes were built Completely different from gun barrels so people wouldn't do this Search high and low for the correct barrel thread and third they just don't make it you have to buy a gun barrel or produce it yourself
PVC gets really pliable when you ad heat, gonna act like an al dente noodle when it gets hot. We used to use a simple plumbing torch to make our own bends in electrical conduits
put a pepsi bottle plastic over the barrel it knocks down the sound 60 percent,i live in the country and have an old lady across the street,that can't hear me snuffing coyotes in the early morning ,so this device will probably work on a 22 lr,its what i shoot at the worthless dogs killing everyones chickens
You have to have an adapter for the oil filter because any threaded barrel has a special reverse thread. Get caught with that adapter without a stamp and ATF will be knocking at your door.
@@InfantryGeek Fuck the ATF. Those adapters are extremely easy to get without having any members of the thin blue line gang at your door. And you do not legally have to have a stamp to possess and adapter. Nor should you get a stamp at any point. Tax stamps and CCWs are for collaborators. Dangerous Freedom > Comfort