I believe - at least with my AAC can and AAC Blackout brake, that the brake acts as a baffle of sorts and can extend the life of your can. I don’t know if that’s quantifiable, as I’m pretty new to suppressors, but this is what I was taught, by someone who has used them much of his military career and also as a civilian. I have also read some research to support this, and it does make some sense to me in my limited scope of knowledge.
With the AAC, their Blackout brake is substantially higher than their FH, which is why I suppose you get a free FH with the can.
Even so I only run brakes and so I recommend brakes.
I’ll tell you that once I started running drills and training with my can on my SBR’s I did not want to run it any other way. I’ve already bought another .30 cal AAC can dedicated for my 300BLK SBR and once I get it here in a few of months, I will buy a smaller 5.56 can, mostly likely the M42K. For the most part I enjoy shooting my precision rifles with a can and have a dedicated .30 cal can for my 308. The plan is to leave it on my .308, the other .30 cal can on my 300BLK, and then a 5.56 can for my go-to SBR, which wish either float.... or I’ll end up getting a couple more dedicated 5.56 cans so each SBR has its own. I hope to resist that pull to the dark side. Or broke side, but I’m not counting on it. Lol
You’ll love that thing in your 10.5. My suppressed 10.3 is one of my favorite setup. Just 150% blast!
Good luck!
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