And the best reason to make sure the bayonet is properly aligned: If your bullet hits it - even a little, a new one is $160.00. Found this out the hard way. LESSON learned.
a cheaper and easier way to resolve that problem as I have is place a small piece of velcro (female side) on the bottom of the nylon strap where it touches the barrel. This will tighten the strap right up and stay in place forever. One less moving part :)
I would drop a cleaning rod in the barrel to verify the bullet travel is totally perpendicular to the bayonet. yeah, ditto on the chamber flag. lol Good vid though
As far as I know, that product is not recommended for barrels of more than 1 inch diameter, presumably because the bayonet will be too far below the projected rifle bore. So what is the diameter of your suppressor? Looks very close to one inch diameter.
I hear so many people saying "The Magnetospeed" shifts your POI. WTF, why is that even relevant? Look...You work up your handloads and get them to group and shoot the way you want them to...Right? THEN you strap on the Magnetospeed to find your muzzle velocity so you can set your dope. Once the Magnetospeed is on the gun, who cares about POI? all your doing now is getting the speed of the round..........You already know your handload is good!
If you put your magnetospeed on a suppressor I wouldn't imagine much is happening with poi, but if you just mount it on the barrel without a Supressor - it may change your barrel harmonics - I simply do my load development first // then once I found a sweet load - I'll then chronograph it for my ballistic app. Just what I do . Thanks for watching.
It's most likely due to guys doing their load development with the V3 already in place. Anything on the barrel changes the internal barrel harmonics a slight amount while the bullet is traveling down the bore. It's only common sense to get load velocity AFTER you have found the node in the harmonic sequence for your reloads. Not everyone thinks that way.... ;)
@@cwoodside907 I like bench rest champion Eric Cortina's approach to first work on minimizing muzzle standard deviation, then work on bullet seating and barrel harmonics: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6VEMZJYovMA.html