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04-08-2024, 08:17 PM
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My first "black rifle" range toy..it's a hoot to shoot
When I left the Army in 1968 my outfit had not been issued any M16's. We still had M14's so I never really experienced the M16. For years and years me and my buddies didn't really want, or cared for anything like these plastic things. One of my co-workers was a survivor of the IA Drang Valley with Col Hal Moore, and always had not much good to say about them, miserable to keep clean, ammo was pure junk, best you could do was hang around the snipers and hope to get one of their M14's.
Anyway...like said I never really had any interest until a couple weeks ago my son found one locally and asked me to go look. I did and it was basically fired very, very little if at all. 100% made in USA, 1:12 twist, chambered for the 5.56 x 45 NATO round (tad more better than 223 Remington or so I've heard). Disassembles pretty easy (quicker than my M1 Garand).
Sights take some getting used to, (big ole hole in that rear "peep" vs my .062 NM rear on the Garand) and the Delta Ring spring is really, really stiff if you want to pull the handguards.
Don't get me wrong....I still love walnut furniture along with parkerized steel....but for less than $600 (came with 50 rounds Federal Cartridge 223 - 55 grain FMJ) the rifle is really fun to shoot. Seemed to me to be "zeroed" right at 100 yards.
Anyhow............enjoy the pics.....these things are fun but not adicitve like S&W handguns and NO...I'm not even thinking about adding any "tacticool" "c%$&)
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04-08-2024, 08:25 PM
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Be careful they can become addictive. Now is the time to stock up on 55gr bulk ammo. I don't believe you will see it drop much lower and God forbid what happens if the election doesn't go in our favor. I really expect to see prices start to climb as the election rhetoric starts to ramp up into high gear.
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04-08-2024, 08:47 PM
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The first centerfire riifle was an M16A1 on BCT back in early 1973. I really enjoyed thosecold & wet days at the range at Ft. Leonard Wood. I now have a few in various configurations. The design has been perfected.
Funny, I went fot years having no desire for an M1 Rifle until a buddy sold me one at a very fair price. I couldn’t believe how accurate that rifle is (and its not going anywhere).
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04-08-2024, 09:14 PM
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At a 1:12 twist, you are golden on the 55 grain ammo. don't expect too much accuracy with the 62, 69, & 77 grain without adding a 1:10 or 1:9 barreled upper.
I'm up to 3. A 1996 Bushmaster 1:9 in 223, a parts gun in 300 Blackout, and a 308 AR-10 style. The 300 with subsonic ammo and a can is worthwhile, I don't think much of it in the supersonic configuration. The 308 is a 308, I took awhile to find an ammo it liked but Hornady makes a 155 grain A-Max round it likes.
If you reload, you might look into a 50 grain polymer tipped bullet over H-332, H-322, WW-748. Those are all Ball powders that Stoner designed the system around. My Bushmaster gets 1/8" 5 shot group (center to Center) with the 50 grain V-Max & Blitzking. It gets 3/8" groups with a load I did in the 1980's using WW-748, Win 55 gr FMJ w/cannelure, and a CCI Sm. Rifle Mag primer that is no longer made. Rem 7 1/2 primers are almost as accurate!. If using a cannelured bullet crimp in the notch, if not use a factory round to determine overall length. (The loading manuals give you max length not what works best!) I use the RCBS AR die set now. (Black Box) with a taper crimp die, so you don't have to be as picky about trimming the cases. Have fun!
Ivan
Edit to add: I use a 4.5-14x40 mm Adjustable Objective scope.
Last edited by Ivan the Butcher; 04-08-2024 at 09:18 PM.
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04-08-2024, 09:29 PM
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Enjoy it
What brand is that? Lots of folks buy an AR and swap out parts immediately. Shoot it some, determine what you like or don’t, and proceed to tune it to suit you.
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04-08-2024, 09:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmansguns
When I left the Army in 1968 my outfit had not been issued any M16's. We still had M14's so I never really experienced the M16. For years and years me and my buddies didn't really want, or cared for anything like these plastic things. One of my co-workers was a survivor of the IA Drang Valley with Col Hal Moore, and always had not much good to say about them, miserable to keep clean, ammo was pure junk, best you could do was hang around the snipers and hope to get one of their M14's.
Anyway...like said I never really had any interest until a couple weeks ago my son found one locally and asked me to go look. I did and it was basically fired very, very little if at all. 100% made in USA, 1:12 twist, chambered for the 5.56 x 45 NATO round (tad more better than 223 Remington or so I've heard). Disassembles pretty easy (quicker than my M1 Garand).
Sights take some getting used to, (big ole hole in that rear "peep" vs my .062 NM rear on the Garand) and the Delta Ring spring is really, really stiff if you want to pull the handguards.
Don't get me wrong....I still love walnut furniture along with parkerized steel....but for less than $600 (came with 50 rounds Federal Cartridge 223 - 55 grain FMJ) the rifle is really fun to shoot. Seemed to me to be "zeroed" right at 100 yards.
Anyhow............enjoy the pics.....these things are fun but not adicitve like S&W handguns and NO...I'm not even thinking about adding any "tacticool" "c%$&)
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Nah, you're screwed - the last pic clearly says "tactical" right on it. Might as well order up that cool optic, also one of those 45 degree optics that hang off the side, a blender and fax machine for it.
A little bi-pod might be cool.
Have fun with it!
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04-08-2024, 10:01 PM
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Welcome to the party! Better late than never.
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Last edited by Eric300; 04-08-2024 at 10:03 PM.
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04-08-2024, 10:27 PM
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I have never had much of a desire for one of these till lately. That is until after I shot my son's. Trouble is, I know nothing about them, and there are a lot of choices out there
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04-08-2024, 10:35 PM
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Congratulations on a fun rifle. They are easier on the shoulder than the M1/M1A, and a bit cheaper to shoot. By coincidence, i just finished re-reading "We Were Soldiers, Once ...and Young"; quite the book.
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04-08-2024, 10:53 PM
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Have fun! congratulations...
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04-08-2024, 11:40 PM
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My first introduction to the M16 was in 1967 at a small arms fam course. The early rifles we were shooting didn't have the shell deflector and I shoot left handed. Not a match made in heaven. Almost 50 years later I bought a left eject version and now have 2. I shoot them on occasion but still not my favorites.
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04-08-2024, 11:51 PM
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Nice looking AR, good luck with it.
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04-09-2024, 12:05 AM
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FWIW, I think adding a carry handle scope on the rifle would be an OK addition and not at all qualify as "tacticool".
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04-09-2024, 12:16 AM
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I will admit it. I was unaware there were 1-10 and 1-12 twist available. I have 3, two 1-7 and one 1-8 twist. I gotta start paying attention.
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04-09-2024, 12:27 AM
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If you reload try some 52gr projectiles in it. My older A1 uppers with 1-12 twist really like those.
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04-09-2024, 12:53 AM
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cmansguns, I can relate. I entered the Army (ours) in early '68. We qualified with the M-14, then the M-16. I shot expert with both, but it was easier with the M-14. I liked the M-14 a lot, but was not really interested in the M-16, and was issued a M48A3 instead of an M-16 in RVN anyway.
Much later, I did acquire an AR or two, was issued an M-16 in LE, became a Colt armorer for the M-16s, etc. I guess I have grudgingly come to appreciate the AR type rifles. The modern ones seem very accurate, and just seem to work. I'm still not a true aficionado, they have not become additive, I don't intend to do any "builds", etc., but admit the AR is an effective tool..
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04-09-2024, 09:34 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dsf
FWIW, I think adding a carry handle scope on the rifle would be an OK addition and not at all qualify as "tacticool".
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Agreed. I like the old 3x and 4x Colt scopes as well as the very similar Blue Ring scopes that were made for awhile.
The Blue Ring scope. The adjustment knobs are on the “wrong” end, but the quality was very good, like the Colt scopes. My understanding is that both were made by the same company.
Last edited by BB57; 04-09-2024 at 10:03 AM.
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04-09-2024, 09:39 AM
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It was interesting to see several thousand Viet-Nam era uppers for sale at Knob Creek in 2007.My nephew bought one and built a 60's era gun out of it. Enjoy your new rifle.
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04-09-2024, 09:48 AM
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My new toy-seems very nice quality
Thanks for all the comments about my newly acquired AR 15 (clone of M-16). The rifle was 100% manufactured in USA by Stag Arms, formerly of New Britian CT, then shut down by the BATF because they had a bunch of un-serialized receivers laying around. They were bought out by White Wolf and moved everything to Cheyenne Wyoming. I called them last week to get some info on this "discontinued" rifle and was very pleasantly surprised in that a real person answered, was very friendly, answered all my questions.
Evidently this rifle sold for $1349.00 retail when offered some years ago as Stag Arms, STAG 15 Retro. which is why I grabbed it for less than half and in its condition with 50 rounds ammo and a extra 30 round mag...really couldn't complain.
I realize there are many brands on the market but we (son and I) were not really looking or reviewing, just watching for a period Colt Sporter or one that looked period correct but had to be American made. The Colt Sporters seem all to be in the $2,000 and up bracket if and when you find them.
This one has the A2 buttstock with trap door buttplate, the A3 carry handle, F front sight, and the round, fat M4 style two piece handguard with heat shields. The 30 round mag is probably not legal anymore in lots of States, but no problem here in Virginia.
I agree with stocking up now on ammo. CMP has some real decent deals on Federal bulk, as well as my local LGS so I'm guessing this is almost as popular as 9 mm these days, which keeps the price "reasonable" (lots of supply, competition, etc.).
Sure wish it were the same for 32-20 WCF!
Anyway...I like the A2 "solid" buttstock, retro style. I remember bayonet and hand-to-hand training in the Army, and a walnut M1, or walnut stocked M-14, would surely crack the jaw/skull of anyone receiving a butt-stroke. Don't know how it works with a A2 plastic if you had to do it, but for sure those collapsible stocks that they peddle today look flimsy and I guess "cheek-weld" doesn't mean anything anymore so "spray and pray"?
Thanks again for all the comments....they are fun at the range!
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04-09-2024, 09:53 AM
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You need to add some accessories!
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Pass it on.
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04-09-2024, 09:59 AM
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I was issued an M16A1 just as the M16A2 was being introduced.
Given that I had a father and uncles who were all WWII and Korean War Vets as well as one who had used the M14 in Vietnam, and that I’d shot M1As and M14s in college and in service rifle competition, I was almost genetically biased against the M16.
However, I found as long as you mitigated its aversion to dirt it wasn’t a bad rifle. It was light, handy and very well balanced. I also found it was minute of torso accurate out to 350m and had no issues shooting a clean score with in on train fire ranges out to that distance.
—-
Unfortunately I also discovered the M16A2, while well intentioned, was a retrograde step:
- it added weight and bulk with no real benefit in performance, although the heavier barrel forward of the gas block and the round handguards made it more tolerant of abuse via an attached bayonet (that no one used anymore);
- the 1-7 twist rifling was used to allow the almost never fired M856 tracer round, when 1-9 twist was optimum for the M855 round, which reduced accuracy with both M855 and M193;
- the M855 round with its penetrator was less accurate than M193;
- the higher weight reduced velocity and consequently the threshold ranges for fragmentation and tumbling of the, bullet;
- the longer stock was even less amenable to use with body armor; and
- the rear sight added a long range capability that wasn’t practical and not in keeping with the comparatively poor accuracy of the average lot of M855.
Not surprisingly it was fairly quickly replaced by the M4, with a short barrel that made M855 even less effective, and the M4 quickly got a whole bunch of attachments that made it heavier than the original M16A1.
——
I eventually replaced my M1A with an AR-15 for service match competition. That was partly due to reducing ammo costs, but largely due to the ability to use 5.56mm reloads that were more accurate than issued match ammunition. You’ll note however it has the shorter A1 stock.
I also bought police department Colt SP1 and M16A1 upper halves when the department “upgraded” to M4 uppers (to be fair the shorter barrel works better as a patrol rifle, much the same as it worked better for mechanized troops) and put them on NDS-602 lowers. The original M16 and M16A1 configurations are still, IMHO, by far the best AR-15 configurations ever made when it comes to overall utility and flexibility.
I also like the AR-15 as a Varmint rifle when fitted with flat top receiver, a 20” bull barrel, a set trigger, and a suitable scope.
Last edited by BB57; 04-09-2024 at 10:00 AM.
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04-09-2024, 10:05 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmansguns
... the Delta Ring spring is really, really stiff if you want to pull the handguards.
D
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You can get a rubber coated Delta ring tool for about $15. They work great!
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04-09-2024, 10:08 AM
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Everyone should own one or two. Have a stash of mags and ammo
Mine doesn't get shot much, as I tend to practice/"train" with my S&W 15/22. I'm frugal..... OK cheap!
Most .223/5.56 shooting gets done with one of my CZ 527s an American and FS/Mannlicher. You can't hunt with a semi in Pa.
P-mags are considered by most to be the gold standard..... 10rounders are nice for prone of bench shooting
Last edited by BAM-BAM; 04-09-2024 at 10:12 AM.
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04-09-2024, 10:26 AM
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The AR15 is a fun rifle to shoot. Minimal recoil, good energy, and capable of excellent accuracy.
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04-09-2024, 10:30 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Narragansett
I have never had much of a desire for one of these till lately. That is until after I shot my son's. Trouble is, I know nothing about them, and there are a lot of choices out there
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The $2,000 AR15 will allow you to tumble down the side of a rocky mountain and your rifle will shoot accurately or the someone who caused your tumble. The $500 AR maybe broken. This explanation was given to me an experienced expert who had tumbled down some rocky slopes.
My $500 on sale complete AR-15 (I have two) will shoot as accurately as anyone's high dollar AR, but leave you with $1,000 to buy more components or loaded ammo. I found out that the most accurate load was Remington bulk 55 grain hollow point bullet with a mid-range load of anybody's powder, at less than 400 yards shooting at prairie dogs.
I can shoot off a bench or prone with a bipod, but stand up and shoot with a sling doesn't do it for me.
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04-09-2024, 12:11 PM
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They are like Lays Potato chips, you can't buy just one. When you see Alice, tell her "hi" for me.
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04-09-2024, 06:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jmwyro
I was unaware there were 1-10 and 1-12 twist available.
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The Ruger Number 1s' single shot rifles in 5.56/223 had 1:14 twist barrels. Even difficult to get accuracy with the std 55 grainers.
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04-10-2024, 02:04 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmansguns
I realize there are many brands on the market but we (son and I) were not really looking or reviewing, just watching for a period Colt Sporter or one that looked period correct but had to be American made. The Colt Sporters seem all to be in the $2,000 and up bracket if and when you find them.
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I bought a Colt LE6920 around a month ago off GB for around $1,100 shipped. It also has the removable carry handle.
I've never in my life saw a front sight like yours has. Unless it's the angle of the picture, it kinda looks like your gas tube is upside down. All I've seen curve down from the delta ring, but I've never owned one with a 20" barrel.
Rock River Arms has a great deal on 20 and 30 round magazines. I've bought a bunch and everyone has been made by Okay. The mag yours came with is as good as any made. D&H is a great mag. Never owned a plastic one.
Just checked, and they only have 10 and 30 round available now.
Aluminum Mags
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04-10-2024, 08:29 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jmwyro
I will admit it. I was unaware there were 1-10 and 1-12 twist available. I have 3, two 1-7 and one 1-8 twist. I gotta start paying attention.
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I’m not aware of 1:10” twist ever being used in the AR-15.
Ruger Mini 14s initially had 1:10” twist barrels, followed by the move along with the general AR-15 herd to 1:7” twist after it was adopted by the military, before wising up and going with a 1:9” twist like most thoughtful commercial AR-15 makers not catering to the rather ignorant “mil-spec” crowd.
1:7” twist was also still common in service match rifles like the Colt H-Bar AR-15 where longer bullets with much higher BCs were used. However, 1:8” twist was increasingly adopted as it would stabilize the longer bullets without excessive spin and related excessive precession if any yawing of the bullet occurred.
I still prefer the 1:12” twist for 55 gr FMJ. The Colt made barrels in my SP1 and M16A1 upper halves will produce consistent 5 shot 1.5 MOA accuracy at 100 yards with handloaded Hornady 55 gr FMJBT bullets, as well as with Black Hills Ammunition factory ammo loaded with the same bullet. They are better made than the average Remington or Winchester 55 gr FMJ.
That slower 1:12” twist also reduces the yaw that occurs when a less than perfect 55 gr FMJ bullet transitions from rotation around the center of form in the barrel to rotation around the center of gravity on flight. The bullet will yaw slightly during that transition and that yaw creates precession that causes the bullet to spiral a bit in flight until it settles down.
Faster barrel twists cause excessive rotation which increases the magnitude of the precession and reduces accuracy. When you combine a 1:7” twist barrel with cheap bulk bullets or pull down bullets you get less accuracy than with a 1:12” twist or even a 1:9” twist.
——
The early AR-15 had a 1:14” twist as designed by Stoner. That was modified to a 1:12” twist following cold weather testing by the US Army that found the marginal stability of 55 gr FMJ was not sufficient in cold weather. 1:12” twist became the standard in the M16 and M16A1 and largely replaced 1:14” twist as the standard for commercial .223 Rem rifles.
That original 1:14” twist is also partly why Remington, with contract in hand for development and mass production of M193 ammunition, substituted its own shorter 5 secant ogive Type A” 55 gr FMJ projectile for the original longer 7 secant ogive Sierra designed “Type B” 55 gr FMJ projectile specified by Stoner. The shorter bullet offered better stability at the specified 1:14” twist.
However, that shorter Type A bullet also had a lower ballistic coefficient and shed velocity faster, making it about 150 fps slower at 500 yards. That was significant as the new bullet could no longer penetrate 10 gauge mild steel plate at that distance, which was part of the acceptance criteria.
That led to an increase in pressure, and then a waiver in maximum average pressure in order to increase the muzzle velocity enough for the Remington bullet to have enough remaining velocity at 500 yards to meet the penetration requirement. It never did, but the US Army compromised and the range was shortened to accommodate the lower remaining velocity.
All that effort and procurement drama for the sake a shorter Remington bullet that was no longer needed in the faster 1:12” twist barrel the military adopted. Plus of course better profit margin for Remington.
A 1:7” twist was adopted by the US military when the 62 gr SS109 projectile was adopted for M855 ammunition in the M16A2. That led to the popular perception that 1:7” twist was required to stabilize M855, but that’s not the case. A 1:9” twist is actually optimum for the SS109 projectile and M855 ammunition. The 1:7” twist was necessary for the much longer tracer bullet used in M856 ammunition. It had a requirement in the M249 to have sufficient stability to penetrate 10 gauge steel at 600 meters, which was accomplished with a steel penetrator in the tip of the bullet.
The M16A2 just got stuck with the 1:7” twist rather than 1:9” twist due to a somewhat misguided determination that it should also be able to fire M856 with the same stability to the same distance.
But as noted above, once the milspec hub bub died down, 1:9” twist became the norm for most factory AR-15s where 55 gr and 62 gr ammunition would be most often used, and 1:9” twist will stabilize most bullets up to about 69 grains and some 75 gr bullets without long ballistic tips.
1:8” twist will still stabilize the longest bullets like the 75 gr A-Max and 80 gr A-Max or the 77 gr Sierra, especially at 20” barrel velocities. The 1:7” twist isn’t needed at all other than for very long bullets at 14.7” and 16” carbine velocities.
But there are still a lot of 1:7” twist milspec die hards out there. They are also the folks who want a chrome lined bore, even though they don’t live in a swamp.
——
Personally, my Service match rifle uses 1:8” twist, while my M16/M16A1 clones use 1:12”, and pretty much everything else has 1:9”, including a 20” bull barrel Varmint rifle. That Varmint rifle shoots mostly 52 and 53 gr match bullets or 55 gr Hornady FMJBTs. Accuracy is sub MOA with the flat based match bullets and 1 MOA with the Hornady 55 gr FMJBTs
Last edited by BB57; 04-10-2024 at 08:46 AM.
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04-10-2024, 11:12 AM
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Dad didn't care for the M16. He had not been in a front line unit for some time prior to going to Vietnam (II Army HQ, then P11/27 Kestrel Evaluation Squadron, then USAGUK London, prior to going to the Vietnamese Language School).
At the end of the language school he got familiarization training with the M16. As soon as he got to Nam he ditched the M16 in his hootch, and carried a Model 12 riot gun in the bush along with a Browning Hi-Power that he scrounged from the Aussies. He was in the field with ARVN troops as part of MAC-V MI.
He died last June, but we had several trips to the range these past couple of decades. He never wanted to shoot any of my AR's, and always gravitated to the M1 Garand and M1 Carbine that he was intimately familiar with from his early days with the 508th ARCT.
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04-10-2024, 11:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmansguns
Anyway...I like the A2 "solid" buttstock, retro style. I remember bayonet and hand-to-hand training in the Army, and a walnut M1, or walnut stocked M-14, would surely crack the jaw/skull of anyone receiving a butt-stroke. Don't know how it works with a A2 plastic if you had to do it, but for sure those collapsible stocks that they peddle today look flimsy and I guess "cheek-weld" doesn't mean anything anymore so "spray and pray"?
Thanks again for all the comments....they are fun at the range!
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Gotta agree about the flimsy adj butt stock, but they are a God send to us short people with even shorter arms. Still have several earlier Bushmaster A2's (purple receivers), and like the solid handle rear site and solid front site for solidity, and no batteries required. Have modified several forearms very carefully to be slightly looser, and can lead to better accuracy on longer strings.
Also like mine shorter, which harkens back to the short arms.
Last edited by zeke; 04-10-2024 at 11:46 AM.
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04-10-2024, 03:45 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmansguns
When I left the Army in 1968 my outfit had not been issued any M16's. We still had M14's so I never really experienced the M16. For years and years me and my buddies didn't really want, or cared for anything like these plastic things. One of my co-workers was a survivor of the IA Drang Valley with Col Hal Moore, and always had not much good to say about them, miserable to keep clean, ammo was pure junk, best you could do was hang around the snipers and hope to get one of their M14's.
Anyway...like said I never really had any interest until a couple weeks ago my son found one locally and asked me to go look. I did and it was basically fired very, very little if at all. 100% made in USA, 1:12 twist, chambered for the 5.56 x 45 NATO round (tad more better than 223 Remington or so I've heard). Disassembles pretty easy (quicker than my M1 Garand).
Sights take some getting used to, (big ole hole in that rear "peep" vs my .062 NM rear on the Garand) and the Delta Ring spring is really, really stiff if you want to pull the handguards.
Don't get me wrong....I still love walnut furniture along with parkerized steel....but for less than $600 (came with 50 rounds Federal Cartridge 223 - 55 grain FMJ) the rifle is really fun to shoot. Seemed to me to be "zeroed" right at 100 yards.
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Your rifle's upper really has me stumped. It actually doesn't have a modern delta ring, but does have a really old school slip ring. I have one retro AR that I put a slip ring on. They are near impossible to push back without using a tool.
The barrel has the Brownells cage code 12238, They made a BRN Proto rifle that used the front sight base like yours. Not sure if they ever sold the barrels separate. If not someone took the barrel off one and put on your upper.
Either way, it's a really cool build that you got a killer deal on.
GUNS Magazine Brownells BRN-PROTO AR15 - GUNS Magazine
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04-10-2024, 10:30 PM
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Congrats and enjoy. Stag 15 is a good gun. With ammo included? You stode it.
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04-10-2024, 10:42 PM
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They do have the habit of multiplying, I’ve got about a dozen of them. My favorite is my Colt AR6520, similar to the LE6920 M4 Carbine with a 16” pencil barrel. What a handy little carbine (I’m sure Gene Stoner would approve).
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04-10-2024, 11:07 PM
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"Sure wish it were the same for 32-20 WCF!"
That's what we need! An AR15 chambered in .32-20!
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04-16-2024, 11:35 AM
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Our stories sound somewhat similar OP, but after shooting my friends AR at the range one day I was hooked.
They make great plinking rifles for me in either stock or modified form and I've had a really good time with them for years now.
Enjoy!
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04-16-2024, 02:12 PM
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I remember when “I don’t want one”. That was many AR’s ago. As noted, a lightweight easily customized all around gun.
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04-16-2024, 07:45 PM
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The H&R Retro 604, Air Force rifle.
You can see the upper and lower don’t match perfectly. The trigger is 6.75 lbs, some creep, typical AR.
Last edited by Yendor357; 04-16-2024 at 07:50 PM.
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04-16-2024, 07:53 PM
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Another shot.
The upper and lower receiver are tight! You can’t wiggle them. A lot of guys swap the stock, pistol grip and fore end for old stuff. Not me.
The only minor complaint I have is that the front sight is screwed down one click before it won’t turn anymore. I don’t know if the put the wrong front sight base on it, or what exactly is going on with the front sight
Last edited by Yendor357; 04-16-2024 at 08:01 PM.
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04-16-2024, 08:07 PM
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See what I mean? There’s about half the front sight showing. The other half is buried in the front sight base.
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04-16-2024, 09:38 PM
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And with every niche market there is someone who fills a need like my attachments below from a company that makes bolt on walnut stocks to replace the plastic..
This is for folks that like the look feel and smell of a walnut stocked M1A/M14 or M1 Garand but the affordability and durability of a modern AR platform. I think the sets are $500 or so, but they sure would turn heads at the range.
Last edited by MelvinWalker; 04-16-2024 at 09:54 PM.
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04-16-2024, 10:00 PM
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I never wanted an AR rfile.....
I just didn't see the need for an AR. I had shot an AK and didn't like it one bit. Felt like a plank. Didn't think a lot of it until I had a chance to shoot an AR. I was immediately hooked. I had to have one. So I assembled two of them. It's become my favorite rifle for shooting. A real 'FUN' gun. I'll take a variety of guns to the range, but always my AR.
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Last edited by rwsmith; 04-17-2024 at 05:51 PM.
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04-16-2024, 10:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yendor357
See what I mean? There’s about half the front sight showing. The other half is buried in the front sight base.
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The front sight should be adjustable. There is a tool for that or use a cartridge to turn the sight.
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04-16-2024, 10:49 PM
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AR-15's, M&P-15's, all are bait for the bolt on network. KalamazooKid posted a pic of the total of what one could do. It's actually hilarious.
They are a bit like owning a British sports car, or a VW needing a tune-up. Parts expense is bottomless. I've owned all, own none now, including the rifles, and not sorry they are gone.
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04-16-2024, 11:17 PM
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Quote:
BAM BAM wrote Everyone should own one or two. Have a stash of mags and ammo
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He is correct! The goblins are everywhere and the government is useless these days, they let anyone do anything anywhere.
I was an M-14/M1A fan my own self, didn't want or see the need for a Mattel rifle. Or so I thought. Long story made short......
Stag 15
Bushmaster X15 ES2
I don't like a lot of add-ons and but this is the only place I'll use a red dot optic. Works like a charm!
And I can get a cheek weld on that Bushmaster.....
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04-17-2024, 05:58 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmansguns
When I left the Army in 1968 my outfit had not been issued any M16's. We still had M14's so I never really experienced the M16. For years and years me and my buddies didn't really want, or cared for anything like these plastic things ...
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The M16 was okay JMHO.
My favorite Rifle Range Toy is the AK-47. Years ago the ammo was just pennies compared to the 5.56 NATO. Plus its low maintenance compared to the M16.
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04-19-2024, 09:37 AM
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try 40 grain bullets
a few years ago, bought a Browning X Bolt, 223 Rem wood stock, a really nice rifle. salesman told me it was bought and brought back to the store because the owner could not get it to group satisfactorily. I couldn't either, with my 62 grain and even my 55 grain bullets. So did the "flag on a rod twist test", and found it was a 1/12 twist. So made up some 40 grain cartridges, with Hornady bullets, and immediately it became an absolute micro accurate rifle. Off a sand bag, scoped, it will put one after another into a nickel. So if your "AR" has a 1/12 twist, it might be superbly accurate with a 40 grain bullet, which means you likely have to load them yourself. I suspect the former owner gave up on the rifle because he was shooting store bought heavier bullets.
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04-19-2024, 12:32 PM
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Didn't read the whole thread. But if it hasn't already been mentioned the rear peep filps and has a smaller hole when you flip it.
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