krob
Member
has anyone here built an ar chambered for 300 blackout? thinking of building an upper to go with my rock river lower was thinking of a 12.5 inch barrel and supressing it pros, cons, ideas?
thanks
rob
thanks
rob
The cartridge also excells in short barrels. 8-9" barrels are long enough to burn the powder completely and deliver great performance without excessive muzzle blast and flash. A 16" barrel will only yield ~150 ft/sec more muzzle velocity than a 9" barrel.
This.
I'm curious why the OP is looking at a 12.5"...
Has anyone tried the cleaned brass sold on Gunbroker? Some sell the primed case and Hornaday projectiles.
What equipment would you recommend to measure the powder and seat the bullet? What sort of powders are recommended, or to be avoided? If the primers are no seated, are these small or large rifle primers?
The 300 Blackout is an excellent caliber that only requires a barrel change in an AR15.
You can use "real" hunting bullets and have the confidence of shooting a heavier bullet (typically twice as heavy as a 5.56x45) on game.
The cartridge also excells in short barrels. 8-9" barrels are long enough to burn the powder completely and deliver great performance without excessive muzzle blast and flash. A 16" barrel will only yield ~150 ft/sec more muzzle velocity than a 9" barrel.
Lastly, you can cast your own cheap lead bullets for this caliber. If you do not go crazy with the powder charge you may even get away without a gascheck.
The brass can be formed from 5.56x45 casings. There is a guy on gunbroker who converts 1000 5.5x45 cases to 300 BLK and removes the primer crimp for ~$70.
On the downside, factory ammo is expensive, hard to find and in my experience not nearly as accurate as the hand rolled loads. In order to take full advantage of the 300 BLK you should reload, IMO.