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The .300 AAC Blackout: Overrated Hype or AR Superstar?

Being concerned about a popular cartridge just being a fad makes sense. Investing in a firearm and the ammunition to feed it isn’t exactly cheap. And the last thing you want is to spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars on a new piece of hardware that you come to recognize is far less effective at whatever you bought it for than a more established cartridge.

 


It’s exactly that concern that has led some of the gun community to be wary of the .300 AAC Blackout as a fad caliber. Meanwhile, the .300 AAC Blackout has unquestionably become one of the most popular calibers for the AR-15 platform. So it seems reasonable to ask: Is that possible if the .300 AAC Blackout is solely just a passing trend?

History and Hype Claims

The .300 AAC Blackout was originally developed as a close quarters combat alternative to the 5.56 NATO. It was meant to deliver more punch from an AR-15 (M4/M16) platform carbine at closer range, with a shorter barrel, and effective subsonic performance to accommodate a suppressor. To date, it hasn’t been openly adopted by more than a few military units.

As discussed, its popularity on the civilian market, however, exploded. Its original intended purpose has been the source of much of the dismissal. The .300 AAC Blackout naysayers insist that it’s maybe OK for shooting, hunting, or defense involving a short barrel, short range, and a suppressor. That means that you should be perusing .300 AAC Blackout for sale and a carbine (or upper) to match.

The AR Superstar

It’s hard to believe that so many shooters could be so wrong about a cartridge. How many (initially) wildcat cartridges find this many adopters while offering blah performance? Maybe the .300 AAC Blackout was strictly a niche short range, short barrel cartridge for a while. If it ever was, it’s not anymore. Shooters now have access to a pretty fantastic spectrum of .300 AAC Blackout loads, subsonic and supersonic, with FPS from 2200 to pushing 3000, and reported accuracy of up to 500 yards.

As for hunting, the Blackout is now regarded as one of the finest hog cartridges on the market and it’s finding an increasingly enthusiastic deer-taking contingent. There are even anecdotal reports of outdoors people in the grizzly country of the Great White North carrying .300 AAC Blackout as protection against the big browns. As for self- and home-defense, anyone who overlooks the short-barrel and suppressor-friendly .300 AAC Blackout due to a perceived accuracy deficiency approaching and past 500 yards isn’t worried about home defense, they’re concerned about engaging in a sniper battle. And for a sniper shootout, yes, there probably is a better cartridge than the Blackout.

About Ammunition Depot

Ammunition Depot has come to be regarded by the shooting community as the premier online source for guns, ammunition, shooting gear, and more. They offer any other firearm accessories you might need, from extra magazines to an incredible .300 AAC Blackout upper selection. Ammunition Depot provides a terrific selection of the best guns on the market and everything you need to feed them, from a single box of .223 Remington to bulk orders, like 1,000 cartridges of .22 LR ammo for sale. The Ammunition Depot team is proud to support our Constitutionally-protected shooting rights and to donate to charities for the troops and law enforcement officers. They promote a policy of vet-preferential employment in Florida, their home state.

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Original Source: https://bit.ly/2vhUleN