Monday, January 12, 2015

SIG MPX™submachine gun



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SIG MPX

A New Standard Has Been Set.
Unconventional design. Unmatched performance. The SIG MPX™ redefines the submachine gun category with a new level of operator safety, in-field adaptability and proven reliability in the harshest environments. There’s nothing else like it. And it’s only available from SIG.
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Ready to Serve.

Every aspect of the SIG MPX firing system has been rigorously designed and tested. So in the heat of the moment, you can respond confidently and effectively, even under adverse conditions.

Additional Features

Bolt Held Open on Last Round Fired
Flared and Beveled Magwell for Easy Reloading
Ambi Bolt Release

Adapt and Overcome.

The SIG MPX gives users the freedom to change barrel length, caliber and stock configuration, all while in the field. There’s no challenge too big or too small for this highly versatile firearm.

Optional Features

Convert to 9mm, .357SIG or .40S&W
10-, 20- or 30-Round Magazines
Integral QD Sling Point

Take it to the Next Level.

With the SIG MPX, we set out to reinvent the standard. Use our full line of accessories to assemble a full weapons system that’s yours alone.

AccessoriesSee All

Conversion Kits for 9mm, .357SIG or .40S&W
SIG MPX Folding Stock
10-, 20- or 30-Round Lancer® Magazines
Segmented Vertical Forend Grip
Triple Mag Pouch & Single Mag Carrier
LE Carry Bag
SIG MPX Deployment Bag

Components

Find the Right Combination for Any Operation.

Telescoping Stock

Side-Folding Stock

SBX Stabilizing Brace

Upper

Lower

Aluminum Handguard

Carbon Fiber Handguard

10/20 rd Magazine

30 rd Magazine

8" Barrel

6.5" Barrel

4.5" Barrel

Specifications

SIG MPX SIG MPX-K SIG MPX-P SIG MPX-SD SIG MPX-PSB
9mm / .357SIG / .40S&W 9mm / .357SIG / .40S&W 9mm / .357SIG / .40S&W 9mm / .357SIG / .40S&W 9mm / .357SIG / .40S&W
Full/Semi-Auto Full/Semi-Auto Semi-Auto Full/Semi-Auto Semi-Auto
Closed, fully locked short stroke pushrod gas system Closed, fully locked short stroke pushrod gas system Closed, fully locked short stroke pushrod gas system Closed, fully locked short stroke pushrod gas system Closed, fully locked short stroke pushrod gas system
Collapsible or folding Collapsible or folding None Collapsible or folding No Stock, Supporting Brace on folding knuckle
Aluminum mono rail Aluminum mono rail Aluminum mono rail Aluminum mono rail Aluminum mono rail
3.0 kg / 6.5 lbs 2.8 kg / 6.2 lbs 2.3 kg / 5.0 lbs 3.2 kg / 7.0 lbs 2.8 kg / 6.1 lbs
580 mm / 22.8 in 528 mm / 20.8 in 428 mm / 16.85 in (No Stock) 808 mm / 31.8 in 670 mm / 26.37 in (No Stock)
610 mm / 24.0 in 559 mm / 22.0 in 838 mm / 33.0 in 462 mm / 18.18 in
460 mm / 18.1 in 409 mm / 16.1 in 688 mm / 28.1 in
425 mm / 16.7 in 347 mm / 14.7 in 653 mm / 25.7 in
1:254 mm / 1:10 in 1:254 mm / 1:10 in 1:254 mm / 1:10 in 1:254 mm / 1:10 in 1:254 mm / 1:10 in
203 mm / 8.0 in 114 mm / 4.5 in 203 mm / 8.0 in 203 mm / 8.0 in 203 mm / 8.0 in
AR-style AR-style AR-style AR-style AR-style
3.4 kg / 7.6 lb 3.4 kg / 7.6 lb 3.4 kg / 7.6 lb 3.4 kg / 7.6 lb 3.4 kg / 7.6 lb
Lancer polymer with steel insert Lancer polymer with steel insert Lancer polymer with steel insert Lancer polymer with steel insert Lancer polymer with steel insert
10/20/30 10/20/30 10/20/30 10/20/30 10/20/30
Specs
Caliber
Action Type
Operating System
Stock Type
Forend Types
Weight w/o Magazine
Overall Length
Folded Length (Folding)
Folded Length (Collapsible)
Folding Length
Rifling
Barrel Length
Trigger Type
Trigger Weight
Mag Type
Mag Capacity
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A Look at SilencerCo’s Saker 556 Suppressor


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A Look at SilencerCo’s Saker 556 Suppressor

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The SilencerCo Saker 556 with included wrenches for assembly / disassembly.
The SilencerCo Saker 556 with included wrenches for assembly / disassembly.
For a little baby bullet in a little baby cartridge, the .223 Remington / 5.56mm sure makes a lot of noise.
Unsuppressed, you can figure the noise level at about 165 decibels, varying, of course with rifle type, barrel length, etc. That’s  louder than a 12 gauge shotgun, a jet taking off or a jackhammer. It’s way louder than the noise level you would experience sitting inside of a speaker box at a Def Leppard concert. Really, I checked.
When you mount a SilencerCo Saker 556 to an AR rifle, you can expect the noise level to decrease to somewhere around 132 decibels. That doesn’t sound like a lot of progress from 165 decibels, so you have to remember that decibels operate on a logarithmic scale. Without getting too geeky here, you can think of that 33 decibel increase (unsuppressed vs. suppressed) in terms of being over eight times as loud as the human ear perceives volume.  Bottom line? Using a silencer on an AR rifle is a big deal. Safety for the ears is a primary concern as a single shot at 140 dB, or more, will permanently damage your hearing. Repeated exposure to lower decibel noises will also cause hearing damage, so wear protection always – even when using a suppressor like this one.
Use of a suppressor makes all the difference with an AR-type rifle.
Use of a suppressor makes all the difference with an AR-type rifle.
The SilencerCo Saker 556 is the original family member. Now there is a Saker 762 and Saker K model, also for 5.56mm, which offers a smaller and lighter package with slightly less sound reduction capability. This model is not designed to be taken completely apart, nor will you need to do that. Baffles are made from something called Stellite, whatever that is, which is apparently 30% stronger than Inconel, whatever that is. The net net of the fancy metal names is that you don’t have to worry about cleaning the baffles. The end cap on the front and the mount body do come off for cleaning and accessorizing, but we’ll talk about that later.

Don’t get frustrated, get MAAD

On paper, the whole MAAD mount concept can be confusing. In reality, it’s a piece of cake. I’ll take a crack at making sense of how it works here.
The Saker body is the main part with the checker pattern that you see in these photos. The ring at the back is the mount section. To change the type of mount, you simply unscrew the mount section from the main body. SilencerCo includes two wrench tools to facilitate this process. Use some oil or anti-seize when attaching the mount to the body to prevent galling. You may want to change mounts down the road, and the hot and dirty conditions inside may make separation hard later.
The standard configuration of the Saker includes a Trifecta Flash Hider and Trifecta MAAD mount. Just replace the muzzle brake or flash hider on your rifle with the Trifecta, and now you have a platform for quick attach and detach. To attach your Saker, set the body and mount over the Trifecta Flash Hider. You’ll see that the bottom of the Trifecta Flash Hider has a ridge or shelf that is roughly rectangular in shape. This serves to orient the suppressor mount to the flash hider in one direction only – the shelf fits into a mirror image indentation in the bottom of the MAAD mount. There’s a good reason for this. Detaching and reattaching the suppressor has no effect on change in point of impact. To be clear, point of impact changes when you shoot without the Saker. However, when you put it back on, it will shoot to the same spot as before when previously mounted.
To complete attachment, twist the body to move interior locking levers into position, and you’re good to go. You can do this with one hand. Likewise, you can remove the Saker with one hand by reversing the steps. Careful, this guy gets hot after some rounds.
You’ll also notice that the three prongs on the Trifecta Flash Hider are all different lengths. This is by design and is intended to prevent the flash hider prongs from singing like a tuning fork. I didn’t hear Free Bird when shooting, so I suppose the design works as intended. If you prefer a muzzle brake, SilencerCo offers a MAAD compatible version of that too.
Note the ridges on the Trifecta Flash Hider. The silencer can only mount one way. This ensures that point of impact will not shift if you detach and reattach the suppressor.
Note the ridges on the Trifecta Flash Hider. The silencer can only mount one way. This ensures that point of impact will not shift if you detach and reattach the suppressor.
The Trifecta MAAD mount installed on the Trifecta Flash Hider.
The Trifecta MAAD mount installed on the Trifecta Flash Hider. Simply twist the suppressor body and the MAAD mount locks onto the flash hider.
The neat thing about the MAAD system is that you can install different mounting bases on the Saker body. You can order a direct thread mount base that allows you to simply screw the silencer onto any .223 / 5.56mm rifle that has a 1/2″x28 threaded barrel. Other optional MAAD mounts include a 51T version for AAC gear, a Y-Mount for Yankee Hill compatibility and an ASR mount for SilencerCo / SWR Specwar muzzle brakes and flash hiders.

MAAD capping

The front cap unscrews to allow attachment of accessories.
The front cap unscrews to allow attachment of accessories.
You’ll notice that the front cap on the Saker has indents. As you might guess, this means the front cap is removable using the supplied wrench. 
The first benefit of this approach is to protect your investment from baffle strikes. The baffle strike is when something goes wrong in the projectile hits the inside of the suppressor instead of exiting cleanly through the fiery hole in the front. With many designs, a baffle strike will pretty much wreck your silencer. Since the silencer itself is ridiculously regulated that means you have to send the whole thing back to the manufacturer to get it repaired or replaced with a new unit with a new serial number. With the Saker design, odds are that a baffle strike will simply knock the cap off the front. A non-regulated spare part fixes that problem.
The second benefit is that you can use different designs of and caps on the Saker. SilencerCo offers both flash hider and standoff breaching / rebar cutting attachments.

Performance

To identify point of impact and/or accuracy shifts, I chose three different hand loads of .223 Remington that have been proven consistent performers out of my Smith & Wesson M&P15 VTAC test rifle. Two were 77 grain loads and the third a 55 grain load, all using Sierra Matchking projectiles.
For each load, I fired groups with the rifle’s “before” configuration of only a Surefire muzzle brake. I then fired the exact same loads with the SilencerCo Saker 556 suppressor installed. I put the target 50 yards down range to increase optical precision and minimize issues related to my aging eyes. Using a 1-6.5x Bushnell Tactical Elite scope, I was confident in my ability to hold each shot at the exact same point of aim and minimize aiming error.
With all three loads, I detected a point of impact shift downwards about ⅔ of an inch when the silencer was installed. I couldn’t detect any lateral change in point of impact.
I couldn’t detect any change in accuracy as measured by group size whether the silencer was on or off, so the Saker appeared to have no impact, positive or negative, on accuracy.
I also checked velocity, suppressed and unsuppressed, with all three loads using a Shooting Chrony Beta Master chronograph placed 15 feet downrange. With all loads, average velocity of multiple shots was about 15 feet per second higher when using the Saker 556.
Since I had a Rock River Arms LAR-15 rifle handy that was also a proven shooter, I mounted a second Trifecta Flash Hider on that one and moved the Saker back and forth between rifles. With numerous outings over a couple of months, I observed no changes in zero or point of impact even though I attached and detached the Saker from each rifle a dozen times or so.

Just the specs

The Trifecta MAAD Mount (installed) and the direct thread MAAD mount (right)
The Trifecta MAAD Mount (installed) and the direct thread MAAD mount (right)
Caliber: 5.56
Weight: 18.0 ounces
Diameter: 1.500”
Length: 6.76”
Average Sound Level: 5.56 NATO – 132.2 dB
Finish: Black Oxide
Mount: Trifecta RS Flash Hider Mount
Optional mounts: 51 Tooth Mount, Direct Thread Mount, Y-Mount, Specwar Mount
Full Auto Rated
Lifetime warranty
MSRP: $1200 (with Trifecta flash hider mount)

Summing it up

I’m now officially spoiled. I’m not only keeping this silencer, I’m also adding Trifecta Flash Hiders to every 5.56mm rifle I have so I can just pop the Saker on whatever rifle I’m using. Plinking, competition or home defense – no matter, all scenarios are better with the massive reduction in sound and muzzle blast. Your rifle will get dirty faster, but for the pleasurable experience of shooting with a silencer, I’ll take that tradeoff.
Once you shoot an AR suppressed, you’ll never go back.
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Ruger Charges into 2015 with Two New Chargers


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Ruger Charges into 2015 with Two New Chargers

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The new Ruger Chargers come in a brown laminate Standard version, and this Green Mountain Laminate Takedown version.
The new Ruger Chargers come in a brown laminate Standard version, and this Green Mountain Laminate Takedown version.
If you’re a fan of the 10/22, you likely know of the Charger. It is an odd beast. Bigger than most of Ruger’s rimfire pistols, the Charger is not really designed to be shot off-hand. And without a stock (and a shortened 10″ barrel), the Charger isn’t a rifle either. The Charger is in a class almost all its own, and it is a blast.
The Enforcer was a mean gun. It was easily concealed and had good capacity.
The Enforcer was a mean gun. It was easily concealed and had good capacity.

The Old Chargers

When Ruger introduced the Charger in 2007, the first thing I thought about was the 1970’s era Enforcer, which was a chopped version of the M1 Carbine made by Iver Johnson.
Yet the Charger was rimfire, and not .30 Carbine, and it had an odd angle on the front of the stock. I think the design comes from the desire to have a stock, but to keep it off (maybe way off) of the barrel. Perhaps it was fashion.
The old charger (pictured below) also had a grip carved with the stock (which made more waste). The guns were popular, and remain popular, but weren’t around long.
The Charger is a unique firearm, maybe even a niche gun. My guess is that everyone who wanted a Charger bought one, and the demand subsided. That said, I ran into someone in the gun store last week who had just found a used Charger in excellent condition, and he couldn’t have been happier.
The earlier Charger, which is no longer available.
The earlier Charger, which is no longer available.
What do you do with a Charger? The lack of a stock makes the charger less versatile than the average 10/22. They’re not really light enough to hold one handed. As far as pistols go, the Charger is on the large side. The inclusion of a bipod made them functional on the bench, or from the prone position, but the lack of iron sights meant you had to mate a scope to the gun to see any real results.
The Chargers didn’t seem like they were meant for any kind of offensive charge. And you’d have a hard time repelling many charges. It isn’t the best set up for any kind of hunting, unless a rabbit or deaf squirrel were to wander across the range. In short, the Chargers were fun guns. They’re accurate, reliable pistols that are ideal for a day of laid back target shooting. And in a world full of reasonably priced rimfire, the Charger would provide for epic good times.
The Takedown, shown here with a Trijicon RMR, comes in a plastic case with pre-cut foam.
The Takedown, shown here with a Trijicon RMR, comes in a plastic case with pre-cut foam.

The New Chargers

These new Ruger Chargers are even better than the old ones. They’re still roughly the same gun, but there are some notable differences. The free-floated barrel has been threaded for a suppressor. The stock is cut to accept AR grips. There are still no sights, but the full picatinny rail up top is a solid place to mount optics. And the strange shape of the forend has been changed, too.
There are two versions out now. The Standard has a laminated stock that is brown and tan. The other swirls in some greens and greys, and is the Takedown model. These guns are still built on the venerable 10/22 action, and they use 10/22 magazines. Both come with UTG bipods that attach to a sling swivel stud. On both guns, I had to back the stud out half a turn to get the bipod to thread correctly.
Inside the gun, it is the same rock-solid 10/22 action that has kept the rimfire at the top of the market for 50 years.

Shooting

I’m not going to do a full range report here. Stay tuned, and I’ll provide all of the relevant shooting details. I’ve taken the gun to the range twice now, and both days were brutal. The day we shot the video segment, it was below 20 degrees, and the wind was raging. All of the 25 yard bays at our range face the same direction, which–on the days we were shooting–were directly into the wind. The targets were bouncing on their wire hangers. It is incredibly hard to judge the size of a group when the target is bobbing up and down. I almost went down and held the dam thing still, just so we could get some data.
The best we could manage under the ridiculous conditions. This is from the Charger with the Scout Scope.
The best we could manage under the ridiculous conditions. This is from the Charger with the Scout Scope.
With the RMR on the Takedown, we could tear up torso sized targets, but the wind made shooting groups almost impossible.
With the RMR on the Takedown, we could tear up torso sized targets, but the wind made shooting groups almost impossible.
What we have here is a proof of concept. The guns are capable of much more, I’m sure. We had a Leupold FX-II Scout Scope on one, and a Trijicon RMR on the other. After getting them sighted in on the dancing targets, we shot a few groups. Both performed well enough for me to proceed with the rest of the review.
We ran a full brick of CCI Mini Mags through the guns–plinking, poking holes in torso targets, ringing steel, and shooting clays on the bank of the berm. As I would expect from the 10/22, we had no jams. No failures. No failures to extract. Nothing at all went wrong. We shot CCIs, Gem-Tech subsonic, Remingtons, and a smattering of other rounds we had left over.

The New BX15 Mag

Ruger has long had great 10 round mags. They released the BX-25 mags a couple of years ago, but those are almost too long to use with the bipod on the charger. Now they’ve got a new shorter extended magazine, the BX-15. It is perfect for the Charger.
The three sizes, 10, 15, and 25. All three work flawlessly.
The three sizes, 10, 15, and 25. All three work flawlessly.
The mags rock in slightly and catch on this post on the back. The BX-15 is my new favorite. It fits neatly in a pocket.
The mags rock in slightly and catch on this post on the back. The BX-15 is my new favorite. It fits neatly in a pocket.
If you live in one of those draconian wastelands where owning a pistol with a magazine outside of the grip is illegal–the Charger is not for you. Or maybe it is–but its not for your state. California sucks like that. For the rest of us, the magazine system rocks. The short magazine can actually serve as a hand hold or hand stop. It makes shooting the charger from a standing position much easier. And it looks cool.

Conclusions?

Don’t try too hard to define the Charger’s roll. The heavy barrel allows for solid accuracy. Yet it can be an awkward gun to shoot. I don’t mean that in a bad way, but if you’ve shot a Charger, you will understand what I mean. You need to get way down on the gun, like you would when shooting prone. Finding appropriate eye relief on the scope without the help of a stock to guide you can be a challenge. Steadying the gun isn’t too difficult. And it shoots incredibly well. Maybe it is a bit like riding a bike. You need to find that balance, and then it clicks. You’ve got it, and getting it back is easy.
The prices? The Takedown is $409. The Standard is $309. Either way, it is  money well spent.
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The Takedown’s padded case holds everything snug.
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It even has cut outs for optics.
The inside of the new rug.
The inside of the new rug that comes with the Standard model.
The Takedown Charger would make a good grab-and-go gun, but I'm still a sucker for the versatility of the 10/22 Takedown.
The Takedown Charger would make a good grab-and-go gun, but I’m still a sucker for the versatility of the 10/22 Takedown.
The two Takedowns, side-by-side. The Charger really gets small.
The two Takedowns, side-by-side. The Charger really gets small.
The Takedown's case.
The Takedown’s case.
The laminated stock has nice contours.
The laminated stock has nice contours.
The new rail is MUCH better than the old one.
The new rail is MUCH better than the old one.
The colors make for a nice camo.
The colors make for a nice camo.
All of the controls will be familiar to 10/22 fans.
All of the controls will be familiar to 10/22 fans.
The Takedown's barrel end.
The Takedown’s barrel end.
The forend has heavy texture carved into the wood.
The forend has heavy texture carved into the wood.
The threads are protected by a nice knurled cap.
The 1/2″ x28 threads are protected by a nice knurled cap.
The UTG bipod is easy to install.
The UTG bipod is easy to install.
The base of the adaptere is padded, so it won't mar the stock.
The base of the adapter is padded, so it won’t mar the stock.
The RMR is an ideal optic for a gun like this.
The RMR is an ideal optic for a gun like this.
The joint of the Takedown.
The joint of the Takedown.
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