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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Rifles
Muzzle Brakes..
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<blockquote data-quote="TiminTN" data-source="post: 1953081" data-attributes="member: 405"><p>It`s an attempt at best. Brakes thrive on extremely high pressure. The exiting gasses are the deciding factor on the effectiveness, higher pressure having the best recoil reduction . The best tamed rifle I ever fired in my life was a Remington 700 LSS chambered in 300 RUM. I do not believe the recoil was as much as my 223 bolt gun. It was amazing how little the rifle acted on pulling the trigger.</p><p></p><p>The 2 and 2 1/4 OZ turkey loads do not produce enough pressure to be considered helpful to a brake, but I acyally have seen the Comp-N-Chokes reduce felt recoill by the slightest of margin.</p><p></p><p>The pressure from the exiting gasses hits the holes and actually push the muzzle away from the shooter is how they work.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TiminTN, post: 1953081, member: 405"] It`s an attempt at best. Brakes thrive on extremely high pressure. The exiting gasses are the deciding factor on the effectiveness, higher pressure having the best recoil reduction . The best tamed rifle I ever fired in my life was a Remington 700 LSS chambered in 300 RUM. I do not believe the recoil was as much as my 223 bolt gun. It was amazing how little the rifle acted on pulling the trigger. The 2 and 2 1/4 OZ turkey loads do not produce enough pressure to be considered helpful to a brake, but I acyally have seen the Comp-N-Chokes reduce felt recoill by the slightest of margin. The pressure from the exiting gasses hits the holes and actually push the muzzle away from the shooter is how they work. [/QUOTE]
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