The picture thread has some. I think they are towards the end of the thread, not sure how many pages the thread is up to now, but there are some guys here who are running non standard hand guards.
"A" rifle? Not a bit of plastic on this one:does anyone have a pic of a rifle with non plastic handguards??
Don't know if airsoft versions would work but Tacticool22 makes a barrel nut adaptor that allows you to run a hogue ff handguard and you could adapt it to run an M4 style setup too, I don't like the idea of a floated hand guard on these rifles due to the plastic upper receiver.
Putting one of the lightweight handguards on your rifle won't hurt the receiver. The adapter barrel nut threads into the receiver, and the actual handguard barrel nut threads onto the adapter nut. After that the handguard either bolts to or is threaded onto the handguard barrel nut. As long as the nuts are tight, there is no danger of the receiver being structurally compromised. Beyond that, most floating handguards are mad of aluminum and the weight difference between it and the factory handguard will be negligible.
As far as hanging all kinds of crap on the rails, hey, that's up to you, but on a .22 it's kinda laughable (IMHO).
Finally, there is a polymer rreceiver available for the full-size AR-15, and I would think that if it can withstand the firing/recoil of a bigger caliber rifle, it can certainly handle the weight of a floating handguard.
Great visual, thanks.
We just need a clamp on front sight block that fits right (or a spacer for a specific model), and I'd be interested in finding a cheap free float (or several cheap ones for various styles).
Free float tubes have no method to attach a front sight, save a few expensive ones.Why would you need a FSB for the 15-22? It's not a gas operated weapon and shouldn't have a purpose if you're looking for a free float. I wouldn't want to add weight to the front of the gun because it seems to be well balanced out of the box.
Lol ... Conditioning your 22 barrel huh ?
Make sure to do 20 tactical flips before bed time too. Practice makes perfect and you need to be cpnditioned.
A new barrel will shoot best if careful attention is given to proper break-in. Differing opinions exist as to what constitutes proper break-in, however, we recommend that no more than 20 rounds be fired at one time before cleaning the barrel - for the first 60 rounds. Each time the barrel is cleaned for the first 120 rounds, it must be thoroughly cleaned, removing all traces of copper and fouling.
Recommended procedure for thorough cleaning: In all cases it is vital that cleaning tools (brushes, patches, etc.) be pushed from the breech toward the muzzle and then removed from the rod at the muzzle end. DO NOT drag anything back through the muzzle.
Clean the bore with a good bore cleaner.
Decopper the bore with a copper solvent.
Clean the bore again with JB Bore Cleaner paste as follows;
1. Work the JB paste into a new patch.
2. Wrap the patch around a worn bore brush.
3. Push it through the bore for ten strokes. Replace the patch every five strokes.
4. Run a dry patch then an oil patch if storing the rifle.
After the barrel is broken in , clean the bore immediately after each shooting session.
Decopper the barrel every 300-400 rounds.
Clean the bore every 1,000 rounds with JB Bore Cleaner.
"A" rifle? Not a bit of plastic on this one:
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-- Chuck
That looks a lot like a spanish mauser?