At Stalon, we are going all in on one very clear message: we deliver the best sound reduction on the market for its size, especially in terms of extension.
It sounds technical. But in reality, it is simple.
How much longer does your rifle actually become when you attach a silencer?
That is where many people misunderstand the suppressor design.

TELESCOPIC CONSTUCTION – MORE SILENCER, LESS EXTENSION
Our silencers are built with a telescopic design. This means a significant portion of the suppressor sits over the barrel instead of entirely in front of the muzzle. In other words, the back-end extends rearward, while only part of the unit builds forward.
The gold ring on our silencers marks the barrel thread. Everything in front of the gold ring is an extension of the muzzle. Everything behind it is a telescopic back-end.
WHAT DOES THAT MEAN IN REAL NUMBERS?
Our telescopic models extend the rifle by just 108 mm, 139 mm, and 149 mm, respectively, despite offering substantial internal volume.
And even the only front-mounted silencer in our lineup extends just 117 mm.
These are not theoretical figures. They represent the actual forward build in front of the muzzle, the number that truly affects rifle length, handling, and maneuverability.
This distinction matters more than most people realize.

COMPARING SILENCERS
When you place a Stalon silencer next to another model on the market, it can sometimes look smaller at first glance. But visual size can be deceptive. Another model may appear shorter overall, yet still extend further forward from the muzzle than even our largest model. That is because overall length and forward extension are not the same thing.
If more of the silencer’s volume sits entirely in front of the barrel, it increases the rifle’s true extension – even if the body itself looks compact. This is exactly why understanding construction matters when comparing silencers.
And forward extension is what changes the real-world handling of your rifle.

WHY EXTENSION CHANGES EVERYTHING
A suppressor that builds far forward shifts weight outward and increases overall rifle length significantly. It affects maneuverability in tight spaces, in hunting situations, and during transport. It also changes how the rifle feels.
With minimal forward extension, you keep the rifle compact and practical, without sacrificing performance.
But there is another critical factor.
HONEST NOISE MEASUREMENTS
Sound performance must always be evaluated in relation to extension.
If one silencer extends significantly more in front of the muzzle, it naturally has more forward expansion volume. That makes direct comparisons misleading unless extension is factored in.
We focus on delivering exceptional sound reduction with minimal extension. That means we optimize internal volume and gas management – not just add length in front.
The result is efficient, compact sound reduction that performs honestly when measured against how much the rifle actually grows.

MINIMAL EXTENSION. MINIMAL WEIGHT. MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE.
Our direction is clear:
Minimal forward extension.
Minimal weight.
Maximum sound reduction.
Maximum recoil reduction.
The telescopic back-end is not only a technical solution; it is a smarter way to build a silencer.

