Hux admits the sparking issue, but says it needs to be broken in to stop it, so probably 100-200 rounds. Their promo ad for this new suppressor says it doesn’t spark, so maybe they fixed it now for this new can…?
@@sublimetulii23 Companies saying titanium will "stop sparking" after a certain round count is a huge lie. The break in is just to remove the leftover powder from the printing process.
Optimization for smaller caliber, smaller bore size means less gas movement through the center bore vs through the flow path within the suppressor. Allows the suppressor to do its job basically vs the gas following the same path as the round. Pew Science has data on the Flow 762 being VERY good on 5.56, the flow 5.56 is new enough that Jay hasn’t published data yet. Given its Hux’s newest can and builds off the technology of the 762, it will likely at the very least perform as well as the 762. If you’re unsure, get the 762, itll work well with 5.56 and 762. A can on 5.56 will never be “quiet”, the supersonic crack will always damage hearing. Look at Pew Science for sound ratings if raw sound is your goal. But be aware of the engineering behind the suppressor, you WILL have to change buffer spring/weights on a DI AR with a high backpressure can, whereas you wont have to with a Hux can.
@@tsufordmanyou’re fucking insane dude lmaooo Any .30 cal can is gonna be louder than the same 556 can.. the larger the bore the less it’s going to suppress it’s literally basic physics what the Fuck… All .30 cal cans kinda just suck with 556 in general, 6mm cans on 556 are a diff story
@@BigTexOrdnance I'm not explicitly referring to this video. There's no media anywhere of nighttime shooting from Huxwrx. And as you can see from the video comments, it's _the_ thing everyone wants to know. There's a reason they're not showing it to us.
@@ghijkl Yeah the dissimilar metals probably dampen any harmonic effects. My FLOW 7.62 rings like crazy on most of my guns. It's an unintended consequence of Hux's design and uniform DMLS construction.
The Flow series is the 3D printed manufacturing vs traditional machining like the old ones. The old one (which I have) has a stainless steel core so it's a bit heavier but it doesn't spark like a lot of full titanium cans do
Titanium for a suppressor outside of handgun calibers is not a very good idea from experience in low-light. Get the Flow 556K if you're interested in this technology.
I like my k cans, generally they are also lighter. But in this case the full is lighter with the sacrifice of durability and sparks from the ti and 5.56 gonna be loud either way
Lighter, shorter, and on a gun that fires supersonic ammo tone matters more than absolute min/max sound reduction because it will never be "hearing safe" anyway.
As an Aug owner, I need that shirt.
3D printed + titanium = flame thrower
Exactly why I went with the velos lbp
It sparks, it actually does a good job hiding flash compared to legacy OSS tech. All Ti cans spark.
Hux admits the sparking issue, but says it needs to be broken in to stop it, so probably 100-200 rounds. Their promo ad for this new suppressor says it doesn’t spark, so maybe they fixed it now for this new can…?
@@sublimetulii23 Companies saying titanium will "stop sparking" after a certain round count is a huge lie. The break in is just to remove the leftover powder from the printing process.
@@lyl7353I have a Banish 223. I don’t have any sparks, but it’s a traditional can. This is a 100% titanium can.
Why should I buy FLOW 5.56 Ti over FLOW 762 Ti for 5.56? They are about the same weight. Which one is quieter on 5.56?
I can't speak on these products, but the quietest 223s I've heard at matches were running 30 cal cans.
Good point. I have both the 556k and 762 ti. I still prefer the K because the ti, like this and other videos show, it has a “ting” sound to the shot.
Optimization for smaller caliber, smaller bore size means less gas movement through the center bore vs through the flow path within the suppressor. Allows the suppressor to do its job basically vs the gas following the same path as the round.
Pew Science has data on the Flow 762 being VERY good on 5.56, the flow 5.56 is new enough that Jay hasn’t published data yet. Given its Hux’s newest can and builds off the technology of the 762, it will likely at the very least perform as well as the 762.
If you’re unsure, get the 762, itll work well with 5.56 and 762.
A can on 5.56 will never be “quiet”, the supersonic crack will always damage hearing. Look at Pew Science for sound ratings if raw sound is your goal. But be aware of the engineering behind the suppressor, you WILL have to change buffer spring/weights on a DI AR with a high backpressure can, whereas you wont have to with a Hux can.
@@tsufordmanyou’re fucking insane dude lmaooo
Any .30 cal can is gonna be louder than the same 556 can.. the larger the bore the less it’s going to suppress it’s literally basic physics what the Fuck…
All .30 cal cans kinda just suck with 556 in general, 6mm cans on 556 are a diff story
@@afdude2220 ting goes away by the way
If a suppressor company doesn't show you the suppressor's night performance then they don't want you to know
Bahaha. Or more like dudes actually work normal hours and we went home before it got dark...
@@BigTexOrdnanceok lol bahaha
@@BigTexOrdnance I'm not explicitly referring to this video. There's no media anywhere of nighttime shooting from Huxwrx. And as you can see from the video comments, it's _the_ thing everyone wants to know. There's a reason they're not showing it to us.
Im sure you need it for your special ops night raids 🤟
@@Omar20v neta
Why not an inconel?
They make a 556 Inconel suppressor already.
@@BigTexOrdnance for the k size?
The inconel version would be significantly heavier. They save it for MG use only.
Is that high pitched ringing from the can/md or the targets?
It's the can/host. The new 3D printed stuff has a weird resonance to it.
@@Argentum88 odd, my Ventum does not do that, but I use a Xeno muzzle device, and it has a steel tube, just a 3d printed titanium insert
@@ghijkl Yeah the dissimilar metals probably dampen any harmonic effects. My FLOW 7.62 rings like crazy on most of my guns. It's an unintended consequence of Hux's design and uniform DMLS construction.
@@Argentum88 thats good to know, i was considering permanent hosts with some flows but will stick with swapping the ventum around on gashosts for now
It definitely has a ring to it, sometimes that does change on different guns though.
What's the different from the OSS 556Ti from the Huxwrx 556TI?
The Flow series is the 3D printed manufacturing vs traditional machining like the old ones. The old one (which I have) has a stainless steel core so it's a bit heavier but it doesn't spark like a lot of full titanium cans do
Titanium for a suppressor outside of handgun calibers is not a very good idea from experience in low-light. Get the Flow 556K if you're interested in this technology.
I’m not sure why people buy the K cans. You give up sound and performance for 1.5”
I like my k cans, generally they are also lighter. But in this case the full is lighter with the sacrifice of durability and sparks from the ti and 5.56 gonna be loud either way
Lighter, shorter, and on a gun that fires supersonic ammo tone matters more than absolute min/max sound reduction because it will never be "hearing safe" anyway.
I can’t wait for these companies to find something else to make make cans out of. Titanium sucks ass.