![]() The M10 and M11 suppressors’ rear section had a core that was a simple tube with a series of holes the area around the core was packed with shoestring eyelets. Some of WerBell’s best-known suppressors were those made for the MAC submachine guns. Mitchell WerBell III’s achievements in suppressor design were often regarded as the most significant advancements since Hiram Maxim’s silencers were patented in 1909. A wipe replacement module was available as a separate item. The life expectancy was 200 rounds before the unit’s efficiency deteriorated and the wipes required replacement. Most of the suppressors that SIONICS/MAC designed and sold, used rubber discs called wipes to help suppress the muzzle report. On December 21, 1970, SIONICS officially changed its name to the Military Armament Corporation also known as MAC. Initially, the product line consisted of suppressors for the US M14 and M16 rifles, later adding pistol and submachine gun suppressors. When Mitch WerBell III began his clandestine weapons business, he set up shop on his property near Powder Springs, Georgia in 1966 in 1967 the company incorporated. One of the few companies of that era was SIONICS which stood for “Studies in Operational Negation of Insurgency and Counter Subversion.” SIONICS’s business was mainly directed at governments-US and foreign. Few/none were making them for the civilian market, which was virtually non-existent at that time. During the 1960s–1970s there were very few companies manufacturing suppressors, AKA silencers, in the US.
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