Dead Air Silencers is cranking up the volume—quietly, of course—by announcing their presence at the 2026 National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) Convention in Nashville, set for February 12–14. They’ll be holding court at Booth #1861 in the Ryman Exhibit Hall, where hunters and outdoor enthusiasts will get hands-on with the RXD910Ti and Nomad Ti OTB suppressors. These aren’t your grandpa’s turkey callers; the RXD910Ti is a titanium beast optimized for short-barreled rifles, delivering subsonic whisper-quiet performance without sacrificing durability, while the Nomad Ti OTB pushes the envelope on lightweight, modular design for backcountry pursuits. In a convention dominated by camo patterns and gobbler decoys, Dead Air’s booth is poised to bridge the gap between hunting heritage and cutting-edge suppressor tech.
This move is a masterstroke for the 2A community, signaling suppressors’ evolution from tactical niche to everyday hunting essential. Turkey hunting demands precision shots in tight quarters, often at dawn or dusk when noise discipline keeps the flock calm and competitors at bay—enter suppressors like these, which slash decibel levels by 30+ dB, reducing hearing damage risk without the telltale crack that spooks game. With the Hearing Protection Act still languishing in legislative limbo, Dead Air’s NWTF debut underscores a growing cultural shift: states like Texas and Florida are fast-tracking suppressor ownership, and events like this normalize them as tools for ethical, responsible hunting. It’s a subtle jab at anti-gun narratives painting cans as silencers for assassins, reframing them as hearing savers for the 2A faithful who prioritize conservation and safety.
For gun owners eyeing the turkey woods, this exhibit isn’t just eye candy—it’s a call to action. Swing by Booth #1861 to demo these Ti wonders, quiz the Dead Air crew on caliber compatibility (they shine on everything from .308 to 9mm), and join the momentum building for suppressor reform. In a post-Bruen world where self-defense rights expand, expect more crossover events like this to erode outdated NFA stigmas, making quiet the new loud voice for Second Amendment freedoms. Mark your calendars, Nashville-bound patriots—gobblers beware.