Keltec P17 + Rugged Mustang Suppressor ammo gauntlet

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2023
  • Running the ammo gauntlet with my p17
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Комментарии • 18

  • @My-Nickel
    @My-Nickel 2 месяца назад

    Great video, thank you, sir!

  • @electrochubb
    @electrochubb Год назад +2

    Great test sir, my suppressed P17 runs great with CCI standard...so good I ordered a case. Accuracy is amazing...
    ....sometimes I think I can light matches with it @15 yds.

    • @evnrayash
      @evnrayash  10 месяцев назад

      thats my go too ammo but i like to check all subsonic loadings

  • @blafishing7581
    @blafishing7581 8 месяцев назад

    Nice shooting OG...! Love the shirt ! :)

  • @camedelic1365
    @camedelic1365 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've been researching cheap handguns for my first firearm, and I'm pretty much sold on the keltek p17!
    Hoping to get a job soon, but my leg is injured.

    • @billredding2000
      @billredding2000 7 месяцев назад

      ..the P17 is a great choice. It may be the best 22LR self-defense handgun available presently.
      Look into Federal "Punch" ammo for it, it may give the best penetration of them all.
      -- BR

    • @camedelic1365
      @camedelic1365 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@billredding2000 Thanks for the information! It seemed perfect to me after watching a bunch of videos on it. I'll look up that ammo!

    • @billredding2000
      @billredding2000 7 месяцев назад

      @@camedelic1365 You're welcome...
      Mine (6 boxes, 300rds @ $10.99 per box) should be here shortly from Cabela's for in-store pickup (as it wasn't in-stock at my local Cabela's). 🙂
      -- BR

    • @StayProteus
      @StayProteus 2 месяца назад

      @@camedelic1365by the way look up BPC-157 if your leg is still messed up. Long story short you can’t get it from a doctor because it’s not FDA approved but you can find it online and legally buy it for “research purposes only” without having to prove anything and you can read studies on it online which there’s a lot of universities and stuff whose studies have been published on legitimate medical/research journals so it’s not like it’s fake and all of them praise it and I haven’t been able to find any with any negative side effects but basically it’s like a miracle healing compound and massively speeds up healing on all kinds of stuff to the point that it heals stuff that even surgery wouldn’t fix or stuff that would’ve required surgery even brain and organ damage (they cut the spinal cords on rats and gave half of them BPC-157 and it literally healed it while the other half went all Stephen Hawking) just make sure you get it from a reputable source online.
      As far as guns go I wouldn’t get this as a first gun especially not for self defense, anything is better than nothing so if it’s all you can get then get it but unless you have a condition or something where you physically can’t handle recoil I’d go for a 9mm, the ammo is like the second cheapest caliber behind .22 meaning it’s less than $20 for a 50rd box and it’s also very popular so you’ll never have an issue finding ammo.
      The problem with a .22 Lr is that it’s rimfire, one of if not THE first type of cartridges in the 1800s were rimfire which means the firing pin on the gun strikes the outer rim of the rear of the case and that ignites the primer powder in theory BUT there’s a reason why centerfire (meaning the primer is in the center of the rear of the cartridge) is now 99% of the market and rimfire is limited to a half dozen mainstream plinking and varmint cartridges and that is because as you can see in the video they aren’t all that reliable and I don’t shoot any of my .22 LRs very much but I can’t remember a time where I shot even 50 rounds without a malfunction and while some of it is the ammo or rather the primer being bad a lot of it is also the gun . Center fire uses a primer that is pressed into the cartridge case and it’s far more reliable and that’s why no military on the planet uses rimfire. It’s cheap and good for practice though so what I would recommend is buying a 9mm Glock or Sig and then buying a conversion kit for it or buying the P17 since it’s probably around the same price but either way you could then practice with .22 if you wanted but I wouldn’t trust my life with any rimfire.
      If you wanted less recoil and high mag capacity while being fairly cheap then look at the PSA 5.7 or Ruger 5.7.
      5.7x28mm is a good round and it’s the smallest centerfire you can get and it’s getting cheaper and cheaper to the point I wouldn’t be surprised if it became the same price as 9mm soon.
      Either way good luck man

  • @Pistoltoter
    @Pistoltoter Год назад +2

    Keep it up man, maybe in the near future do a RUGER mk4 tactical with that little mustang...🍻

    • @evnrayash
      @evnrayash  Год назад +1

      I have a 22/45 I might need to run thru it

  • @kevinjustkevin7627
    @kevinjustkevin7627 Год назад +4

    Could the optic mount be the point of aim issue.

    • @evnrayash
      @evnrayash  Год назад +1

      no. dead on without the supressor

  • @jered5826
    @jered5826 Год назад

    Fun watch! Will you be doing this with a g44?

  • @JamesJones-cx5pk
    @JamesJones-cx5pk 4 месяца назад +1

    You know the rear sight is adjustable???

  • @williamb81
    @williamb81 Месяц назад

    Running it suppressed, which is your favorite(quietest) subsonic that cycles?

  • @matthewmoore661
    @matthewmoore661 10 месяцев назад +1

    It’s the suppressor or nature of the gun regarding the impact shift?

    • @evnrayash
      @evnrayash  10 месяцев назад

      some guns dont shift at all when you add a suppressor. some shift alot like this.