But that's for a 9mm. Are you suggesting that will work for a 300 whisper? In a gas opeated AR-15 the pressure in the cartridge must drop enough to allow the bolt to rotate by the time the bolt carrier moves far enough to begin to cam the bolt open. A 220 or 240 grain 30 cal bullet will require a considerably longer duration and/or higher pressure curve to get it to 1000+ fps the a .357 caliber pistol bullet 9mm, 40 S&W, 45ACP, and even 5.7x28 FN AR-15s can work with simple blow back actions. I don't know if that's been done successfully with a 300 Whisper but I've not seen one.
The Desert Eagle which is also rotary bolt and gas operated puts the gas port about a millimeter in front of the case mouth., but it then has about 4" of gas tube which runs parallel to the bore to the front of the slide where a gas piston is located. I'm not saying a short gas port location can't work with 300 Whisper but there's more to the design than just moving the gas port location and adjusting the port size to get proper functioning.
Spook, I don't think the axial forces on the gas block would be significantly higher because of the short gas port location. It's important that the gas block doesn't come loose but there are many ways to accomplish that including pins, clamps, and set screws. The threaded barrel and nut no doubt works if the barrel contour allows it but I don't see it's advantage. I prefer clamped gas blocks for ease of machining and a good seal. For highest precision do you want a gas operated rifle at all?
|