Nice video. It's all so amazing to see how many know it all's write comments. You video did show they both work. I am going to purchase another EC-Tuner and it seems they don't have any first generations in stock the caliber I need and no back orders so they may be discontinued. It is good to see that the second generation works pretty much the same. Not crazy about the bigger end that was put on to better grip it to adjust it. But it's probably necessary. There are pros and cons to both models. I do like the first generation I have and most likely would be as happy with the second generation after buying as well. Thanks again nice video.
They are worth the money. They do work and some muzzle brakes without tuners cost near as much as an EC-Tuner and some even more. Sometimes they make them shoot butter just putting them on and leaving it on zero. It will only make a rifle shoot as good as it is, or as good as the ammo is.
From what I've seen on youtube most people don't understand how to use them. They adjust until they get the smallest group and don't look for nodes. Finding a node so you can adjust for changing conditions is how you get the most benefit, not finding the smallest group then set and forget.
Was that with your 25 creed? I’d be curious if you shot the test over if you’d see the same results. Have always wondered how repeatable the EC tuner is at each setting
It was. Results might be a touch different because I did no load development before this one. I typically find a setting that it likes and never touch it again. Never had a problem with them
@justinfaulhaber8765 not that I could tell. I'm sure there might be a bit, but it wasn't noticeable to me. Also, I currently have that rifle configured to shoot in the teams division. So it's about 4lbs heavier than I would run in open light
And the demo you were turning the next GEN tuner the wrong way. And the reason to get rid of the Set screws and use a coil spring instead is to eliminate the backlash that the first GEN was prone to.
I see no realistic difference. If you're going to test, then test. Forget the bullshit 3 shot groups & adjust. Keep shooting the 3 shot groups on the same setting & shoot 5x3 shot groups per setting. If you're not prepared to do realistic testing then don't bother.
On the new brake, you start with the tuner flush with the end of the brake and tune by turning the weight into the brake, not away from.
Wish they would state that when buying. This is the only video that shows they work opposite of each other.
Nice video. It's all so amazing to see how many know it all's write comments. You video did show they both work. I am going to purchase another EC-Tuner and it seems they don't have any first generations in stock the caliber I need and no back orders so they may be discontinued. It is good to see that the second generation works pretty much the same. Not crazy about the bigger end that was put on to better grip it to adjust it. But it's probably necessary. There are pros and cons to both models. I do like the first generation I have and most likely would be as happy with the second generation after buying as well. Thanks again nice video.
Awesome video. Been thinking about it. Got to save my money for one I think. Subscribed and thumbs up for you.
They are worth the money. They do work and some muzzle brakes without tuners cost near as much as an EC-Tuner and some even more. Sometimes they make them shoot butter just putting them on and leaving it on zero. It will only make a rifle shoot as good as it is, or as good as the ammo is.
From what I've seen on youtube most people don't understand how to use them. They adjust until they get the smallest group and don't look for nodes. Finding a node so you can adjust for changing conditions is how you get the most benefit, not finding the smallest group then set and forget.
We are suppose to find the best powder charge AND seating depth before we tune with the tuner. The tuner is not meant to find nodes.
@@longshooter457 Yes I know that. But you'll also have nodes at different tuner settings.
@@rustynut1967 Sounds like YOU don't understand how they work.. LOL
Was that with your 25 creed? I’d be curious if you shot the test over if you’d see the same results. Have always wondered how repeatable the EC tuner is at each setting
It was. Results might be a touch different because I did no load development before this one. I typically find a setting that it likes and never touch it again. Never had a problem with them
@@borderbattlemunitions5330 was there any difference in recoil between the 2 brakes?
@justinfaulhaber8765 not that I could tell. I'm sure there might be a bit, but it wasn't noticeable to me. Also, I currently have that rifle configured to shoot in the teams division. So it's about 4lbs heavier than I would run in open light
Very repeatable
great shooting
And the demo you were turning the next GEN tuner the wrong way. And the reason to get rid of the Set screws and use a coil spring instead is to eliminate the backlash that the first GEN was prone to.
very good , details information...
I see no realistic difference.
If you're going to test, then test. Forget the bullshit 3 shot groups & adjust. Keep shooting the 3 shot groups on the same setting & shoot 5x3 shot groups per setting.
If you're not prepared to do realistic testing then don't bother.