I am lusting for Caylee’s Cans….
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPvqPykYk4Q
Titanium serviceable 22LT suppressor… $200…!
Only been around about 90 years
I need to take a shower....!
It was always legal to build your own. You had to and still do, submit a Form 1 with tax then once approved, you could make it with the serial number you filed with.
BLUF: Figure out which guns you REALLY want to have a suppressor on (like your hunting rifle and fighting rifle) then dedicate a suppressor to each one and don't swap around unless you need to. The more rolls you try to stuff into a suppressor, the less good the experience will be. I have a 45 cal multi-roll rifle can that's huge and heavy. Shooting a .45 ACP pistol with it isn't fun because of how heavy it is and putting it on a rifle sort of stinks because it's so front heavy and on a small bore centerfire like a .270 or .308, the .45 cal bore leaves an excessive amount of room reducing the suppression, even with the correct end cap. By having a .30 cal for those guns will result in better performance. My experience is that you SHOULD get a dedicated suppressor for whatever you're building especially if the gun is a "go-to" or important-roll type rig; hunting or defensive rifle.Lastmohecken wrote: ↑Sat Jan 17, 2026 11:03 pm I have been getting more interesting in buying a couple of cans, so I have made several inquiries, and my brother-in-law has been shooting them for years and my nephew shoots F class competition and shoots cans a lot. I have been talking to several dealers also. For a .22, I would just go ahead and get a SilencerCo Sparrow, unless I wanted to get a bigger one for .223, 30 cal or even a 36 cal and that way I could shoot my Buckhammer, my 30 calibers, .223, 300 Blackout, howver, many say that it's better to get a dedicated .22 can and then get whatever center fire can that you want, but my brother in laws says just get the SilencerCo big enough for the largest caliber I want to use and shoot everything out of it.
I still haven't decided yet.
Yes, I agree and I really need about 4 different suppressors, maybe even 5 to cover all of the bases. That's quite a bit of money, and I am not sure if I want to invest that much in suppressors.ikocher wrote: ↑Sun Jan 18, 2026 1:17 pmBLUF: Figure out which guns you REALLY want to have a suppressor on (like your hunting rifle and fighting rifle) then dedicate a suppressor to each one and don't swap around unless you need to. The more rolls you try to stuff into a suppressor, the less good the experience will be. I have a 45 cal multi-roll rifle can that's huge and heavy. Shooting a .45 ACP pistol with it isn't fun because of how heavy it is and putting it on a rifle sort of stinks because it's so front heavy and on a small bore centerfire like a .270 or .308, the .45 cal bore leaves an excessive amount of room reducing the suppression, even with the correct end cap. By having a .30 cal for those guns will result in better performance. My experience is that you SHOULD get a dedicated suppressor for whatever you're building especially if the gun is a "go-to" or important-roll type rig; hunting or defensive rifle.Lastmohecken wrote: ↑Sat Jan 17, 2026 11:03 pm I have been getting more interesting in buying a couple of cans, so I have made several inquiries, and my brother-in-law has been shooting them for years and my nephew shoots F class competition and shoots cans a lot. I have been talking to several dealers also. For a .22, I would just go ahead and get a SilencerCo Sparrow, unless I wanted to get a bigger one for .223, 30 cal or even a 36 cal and that way I could shoot my Buckhammer, my 30 calibers, .223, 300 Blackout, howver, many say that it's better to get a dedicated .22 can and then get whatever center fire can that you want, but my brother in laws says just get the SilencerCo big enough for the largest caliber I want to use and shoot everything out of it.
I still haven't decided yet.
22 cans are so inexpensive that I would recommend doing that anyway plus .22 has some specifics like cleaning that fully welded centerfire cans don't have but don't try putting it on a .223 rifle because the internal volume is so low, the effect won't be very good. Even if the can is rated to handle it, it won't be tuned for it.
Having multi-roll suppressors is convenient until you want to stop zeroing stuff then you need to start dedicating cans to builds. I only have 1 .22 can but I have several guns I like to put it on. If I'm out just plinking it's not a big deal but if I want to hunt, I need to verify point of impact hasn't changed since it's a screw on sort of deal. Not that it's a huge change if any but you still should check. I haven't removed my Q El Camino from my Ruger MKIII small game pistol yet because I don't want to have to make sure it's still zeroed when I finally get to go back out and hunt. If I had another 22 can, I could leave the El Camino can on the MKIII PAC-LITE squirrel pistol and put the other'n on whatever plinker I want to enjoy for the day. Same goes for centerfire. It's really tempting to have one can to do all the things but performance is lost when you don't dedicate.
Based on what you listed, yes on the Sparrow or similar. You also listed .223 so IDK if that's a bolt gun or AR but I would dedicate a unit to just that rifle especially if it's a go-to gun. I run a Dead Air Wolfman in the short config for my ARs but that's only because I haven't switched to a dedicated unit for that rifle. You also mentioned a 360 BH, roll in a 36 cal rifle can and you have your bases covered.