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Best .22 Suppressor

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bk09:
Hey all! Glad to be back! Finished mortuary school in Kansas City and I'm back in Nebraska and getting settled down and am now ready to get my class 3 collection going. I remember looking at these a while ago and had it narrowed down to a couple but forgot what they were. What I'm looking for is a great first shot pop reduction, not hard to clean, and a good all around reduction. Price isn't a factor since a class 3 seems like a long term investment that should last. And Cedar County wasn't one of the jurisdictions that has CLEO's that don't sign off correct? Thanks for any input.

RobertH:
Just get a trust. Best for multiple possessors and estate planning.  I suggest dickclarklaw.com.

For cans I suggest the Warlock II for a lightweight 22lr only can. If you want multiple calibers I'd look into the spectre II or ZAI Voodoo can. Voodoo is American Reaper Scott's other company ZAI.

m0par:
I'd suggest the spectre II as well, with one caveat.

If you intend to use a shrouded barrel like the Tac Sol SBX, seriously consider the Sparrow. Its design won't ever leave you with a thread adapter stuck to the muzzle threads 6" down inside a tube, wondering how you're going to get it out. The core on the Sparrow is threaded to the muzzle directly. There is no adapter to come unscrewed. You'll maybe end up with a little FRP but it would be well worth it. (Negligible on a rifle, and if you absolutely need quiet, a little ablative media will completely eliminate it.)

Heck, you're going to end up with at least 3 22lr silencers anyway, just start off with one of each. Spectre, Sparrow, and Voodoo.

bk09:
Spectre II and sparrow are ringing bells of ones I looked at. And in regards to the trust I'm not going to mess with all that. I don't think the CLEOs around here were known for being an issue, just gotta figure out who I need to contact since I have been out of the gun loop for the last year.

m0par:
Your choice. I'd highly recommend a trust. You can do eForm form 1s (i hear rumor that form 4s will be eForm-able too, sometime...) and usually end up with a much shorter wait.

If you're married, your spouse can be on the trust, so the spouse can legally have access to them (as well as anyone else you may trust enough to add as a trustee -- be careful with that though.)

Its not much more hassle than going to get fingerprints/photos/CLEO signature, and you only have to do it once, rather than with every purchase, and it is much cheaper than it used to be (competition is a good thing).

The only bugaboo is what the ATF _may_ do as far as negating the benefits of not needing fingerprints/photos/etc when using a trust.

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