I like the hellfire brake system so much I have five of them. Four of them are in 6.5mm and one is a 223 two port. They really are easy to use and just plain work.
They really are making some well built and thoughtfully designed products across the board. Hopefully as your market share grows and volume increases the prices can creep down some.
I think it would work better with A larger rear slot than the front slot. Similar to an OPS brake. Good that it has no top or bottom holes on the brake. Better to have equalization pressure on both sides physics wise.
When I see a good idea, like having a universal mounting system, I want to jump in with both feet. I guess the question is, will this get picked up by other companies and become the standard? Up from that, is there some proprietary licensing such that companies will have to kick something in each time they use this design? I do not swap suppressors or muzzle devices, but this hodge podge of adaptors, fitments issues, and concentricity concerns needs to go. I get that the big boys don't want to play nice with others. Instead they should let their product establish dominance, not monopolizing the market through proprietary attachment systems. Companies get so focused on self preservation that they start working against the consumer, it ends up working against them. All the years of getting locked into a proprietary system and fleeced for over priced products build up a resentment. Then companies stop taking risks, innovating, and growing. Eventually someone hungry enough is going to come along to eat their lunch, and the spectators are going to cheer as the empire burns. Instead, have a competition for the best standard and let the best products dictate sales. Start making companies hungry again for that little edge over their competition. At least we'll get incremental increases in performance, instead of this stagnation we've had for years.
Area 419 is offering adapters to fit in lots of different suppressors. Basically you put the universal on the barrels and the brand specific in the suppressor and you have an easy way to cross platform a suppressor. While also having access to breaks and flash hiders that fit directly to the adapter in the same manner when not using the suppressor. While I tend to favor direct thread and having dedicated suppressors for a system, this is as good as it's going to get for guys that move them around a lot. I have lots of Area 419 parts on a CZ 457 build and I can say that if the muzzle device is as good as the stuff I have it's a pure win.
Warren Philips Well said and very true. I am sick to death of these companies proprietary systems just for the money, with that don't like it to bad, don't buy it mind set. As much as I like Sig products they are king of proprietary products.
The taper. It provides more surface area and gripping force of a 90° connection. I've been running one for years and never had one back off. Its only on hand tight and the thing doesn't move.
I like the hellfire brake system so much I have five of them. Four of them are in 6.5mm and one is a 223 two port. They really are easy to use and just plain work.
They really are making some well built and thoughtfully designed products across the board. Hopefully as your market share grows and volume increases the prices can creep down some.
great use of a Morse taper system!! I want one on my long range setup
Once again, I only play Airsoft, but here I am vibing and loving this vids one more time
Terminator Muzzle Brakes are the best brakes
I think it would work better with A larger rear slot than the front slot. Similar to an OPS brake. Good that it has no top or bottom holes on the brake. Better to have equalization pressure on both sides physics wise.
Good info
When I see a good idea, like having a universal mounting system, I want to jump in with both feet. I guess the question is, will this get picked up by other companies and become the standard? Up from that, is there some proprietary licensing such that companies will have to kick something in each time they use this design?
I do not swap suppressors or muzzle devices, but this hodge podge of adaptors, fitments issues, and concentricity concerns needs to go. I get that the big boys don't want to play nice with others. Instead they should let their product establish dominance, not monopolizing the market through proprietary attachment systems.
Companies get so focused on self preservation that they start working against the consumer, it ends up working against them. All the years of getting locked into a proprietary system and fleeced for over priced products build up a resentment. Then companies stop taking risks, innovating, and growing. Eventually someone hungry enough is going to come along to eat their lunch, and the spectators are going to cheer as the empire burns. Instead, have a competition for the best standard and let the best products dictate sales. Start making companies hungry again for that little edge over their competition. At least we'll get incremental increases in performance, instead of this stagnation we've had for years.
Area 419 is offering adapters to fit in lots of different suppressors. Basically you put the universal on the barrels and the brand specific in the suppressor and you have an easy way to cross platform a suppressor. While also having access to breaks and flash hiders that fit directly to the adapter in the same manner when not using the suppressor. While I tend to favor direct thread and having dedicated suppressors for a system, this is as good as it's going to get for guys that move them around a lot.
I have lots of Area 419 parts on a CZ 457 build and I can say that if the muzzle device is as good as the stuff I have it's a pure win.
Warren Philips Well said and very true. I am sick to death of these companies proprietary systems just for the money, with that don't like it to bad, don't buy it mind set. As much as I like Sig products they are king of proprietary products.
Nice
What stops the break from backing out from continued fire? Thread locker ?
Roksett
The taper. It provides more surface area and gripping force of a 90° connection. I've been running one for years and never had one back off. Its only on hand tight and the thing doesn't move.
This would be very interesting if the guy spoke English, lol