Gentlemen, coming from Grant, this is quite an endorsement.
I also really like the M&P 15 Magpul Middy, then again I pitched it to them almost two years ago. ;-)
C4
Gentlemen, coming from Grant, this is quite an endorsement.
Grant,
Could you address how some of these items affect a rifle for civilian use please, especially 1,2,5, 6?
1. Barrel Steel quality - For a civilian use rifle, semi auto fire, does 4140 vs 4150 CMV make much difference?
2. No HPT/MPI (barrel or bolt) - I thought the M&P line bolts were...maybe not individual but at least batch tested? Also, S&W uses the semi auto bolt, and I don't understand the issue there, since I fire semi auto.
5. Receiver Extension is not hammer extruded and is not made out of 7075 - Does this come into play outside of having to mortar the rifle?
6. Twist rate - again, civilian use, most are shooting 55 grain, maybe 62...
I know that this is the standard Colt is built by, but I don't really understand where these things make a difference for a semi auto rifle used to shoot paper and hogs, and maybe defense if it ever came to that.
As far as #3 I have to agree, although I have bought barrels from other companies that have even bigger gas ports. And I have H buffered both of mine.
I question #6 because the guns winning at Camp Perry for the most parts are running the 1:8 twist.
But I too await your answers to Cyphertexts questions?
Although its true that Colt AR's are produced within the same manufacturing infrastructure used to produce the mil-spec versions for the military, it is not entirely correct that all Colt AR's are completly mil-spec as is widely believed or thought. Some basic parts will be mil-spec in the Colt AR's, such as the hammer or trigger and some parts may have some portion of mil-spec applied to them such as chroming, but not all the parts on a Colt AR will be mil-spec completly although they coincidentally may be "within" mil-spec maximums like other manufacturers. Sometimes you can see hints of this in their literature when they point out specific mil-spec parts as a feature such as the hammer or sights for example, and they do have a tendancy to use a "standardized" 1/7 twist barrel.
If you would like to further discuss this, please PM me and we can continue this discussion further.
My apologies to the forum for bringing back this thread on Colt superiority. It's been fairly well beaten. I promise this is my last.
C4,
You have convinced me!.... You've convinced me that if Uncle Sam ever places a full auto rifle with grenade launcher in my tired hands and sends me off to Afghanistan, I want it to be a Colt. Since that's never going to happen, not so much
This portion of the thread began as a discussion on the question of Colt superiority, not to S&W, but the AR population in general. You have successfully turned this into a Colt vs S&W, and in the end a significant trashing of the S&W brand. BTW, I'm certain that everyone here will admit to Colt quality, most everyone would be happy to have one given to them. Buying one is another question.
Do you regret posting that S&W has "no set standards to follow" and "... lack of QA/QC procedures. They don't have anybody that knows what they are looking for"? This is a 160 year old, very successful and admired brand in the weapons industry. If a company makes toilet paper, toasters, tires, or AR's, they WILL have standards and QA/QC. If they "don't have anybody that knows what they are looking for", that company most certainly won't be around for very long.
I call foul on the H&K comment. I pointed out that the Seal Team 6 member carried an H&K 416 on that raid, which was also his "primary weapon" used daily. He had M4's, but they were not his first choice. The H&K is NOT manufactured under the Colt TDP. You dismiss this as OK because the H&K is more expensive. You also dismiss the S&W Sport as not OK because it's not less expensive enough. It's all about the Colt TDP, or it's not.
I previously asked you for data to back up the Colt superior claim. My life's work has always been results oriented. Yes, if object A is claimed to be superior, I need to know what object A will do for me that object B does not. Given that full auto rifles with grenade launch capability will never be a reality in my life, I still see nothing that the Colt 6920 will do for me that a variety of other manufactured rifles will not. Still waiting to see a study demonstrating that a 6920 shoots straighter, farther, faster, lasts longer, never fails.... I don't give a hoot if it has kryptonite lined barrels and chrome balls hanging from the trigger guard, if it doesn't do it better, what's the point?
I admire your rifle photos. What's interesting to me in regard to this discussion is – I see no Colt parts.
Twist rate – I really don't have a clue on the 1/7 vs 1/8 vs 1/9 twist rate. As I've stated, I am a relative newbie. However, from the chart presented on this forum, it doesn't seem to make a lot of difference one way or the other for the average shooter. I do know that a 1/9 barrel will accurately shoot 50 – 69 gr ammo, which is what the great majority will be shooting. You state your opinion, no evidence presented, that when you see 1/9 you are "immediately concerned about an out of spec chamber and over gassed barrel". Where does that come from (facts please)?
No MPI/HPT – You subsequently changed your statement, after someone else corrected you, to say that S&W does batch testing for MPI. Here is where gov't requirements with taxpayer money vs a consumer oriented company selling in a competitive market meets reality. I fully understand why the Army requires 100%, but batch testing is a common practice on a manufacturing line when the line has control of it's processes. You see this fact as a greedy company stuffing dollars in it's pocket. I see this as a reality of the marketplace, a way to produce a quality product for the consumer at a lower price while keeping the company competitive and employees working. And BTW, MPI/HPT testing does NOT impart any quality into a product. The quality is already built in.
Mil-spec and Colt's TDP – There can be an advantage to not religiously following mil-spec. Specifically, I'm referring to a melonite1/8 R barrel. Try finding that in the Colt TDP. You see this as a simple cost saving step by S&W. Try convincing Sport owners that this is an inferior approach to barrel manufacturing. Choice is good.
Doing some searching, I was surprised to read that the Army placed an order for 24,000 M4A1 from Remington at $673 per copy. The previous Colt M4A1 buy was priced at $1221 per. Of course, the rifles will be manufactured using Colt's proprietary TDP. Another surprise - nearly 10 manufacturers have produced AR platform rifles over the past 50 years. One of them was Bushmaster, which should make a Colt fanboy even more ill than an S&W.
Well, its even reflected in their advertisement and marketing:
Colt Rifles - states:
"Colt rifle customers want the genuine article. They know that the story of today's Colt commercial and sporting rifles began with the Stoner AR-15® design that Colt transformed into a military-grade rifle -- the Colt M16 automatic rifle. First deployed in the early days of the Vietnam War, the M16 followed in the footsteps of its Colt ancestors, establishing the quality, reliability and performance benchmarks by which all tactical military rifles have since been measured.
Nearly half a century has elapsed since the United States Government first fielded the Colt M16. Since that time Colt has never surrendered its position as manufacturer of the world's preeminent combat rifles. During the War on Terror that followed September 11, 2001, American troops have increasingly been outfitted with the Colt M4 carbine, successor to the Colt M16 and proud bearer of the American and Colt military tradition.
Colt's rifles are the only rifles available to sportsmen, hunters and other shooters that are manufactured in the Colt factory and based on the same military standards and specifications as the United States issue Colt M16 rifle and M4 carbine. Colt customers want the best, and none of Colt's competitors can match the quality, reliability, accuracy and performance built into every Colt rifle."
1. The only way to get the genuine article is to get the same military model supplied to the military. How many here can go out and buy the same military model, raise your hands. So no, regardless if civilain customers want the genuine article, they still can't get it (at least not legally).
2. Their manufacturing, marketing, and advertisement in relation to mil spec only applies to their military line > "establishing the quality, reliability and performance benchmarks by which all tactical military rifles have since been measured."
3. "American troops have increasingly been outfitted with the Colt M4 carbine" > and thats because Colt has the contract. If another manufacturer had the contract they could claim the same thing.
4. "Colt's rifles are the only rifles available to sportsmen, hunters and other shooters that are manufactured in the Colt factory and based on the same military standards and specifications as the United States issue Colt M16 rifle and M4 carbine." , based upon because of the reasons I previously outlined a few posts back, "based upon" and "being" are two different things. So yes they can legally strongly suggest their civilian lines are mil-spec by using such wording without them actually being mil-spec. And of course a Colt fire arm is the "only rifles available to sportsmen, hunters and other shooters that are manufactured in the Colt factory" because...wait for it...well, its a Colt, Duh!.
5. Colt cites quality as a difference, and they do have a quality firearm but other manufacturers also have a quality firearm as well.
So like I said, if Colt had not gotten the original contract for military supply, there would be another manufacturers weapon being called the "Gold Standard". Thats because if Colt had not gotten the original contract they would have had nothing to capitalize upon for advertising and marketing, and its that contract that gave them a monetary advantage so they could aford to pour more into further advertising and marketing earlier to establish a foothold in the civilian market which is why they became entrenched in the law enforcement community for a long time along with their seemingly never ending contracts to law enforcement agencies that locks them in to the Colt brand. If another manufacturer had gotten the contract they would have been doing the same thing Colt has done, advertise and market based upon what they did for the government contract.
Don't get me wrong. Colt is a fine weapon, I used and tested Colt platforms over many years and am intimately familiar with them, they have a fine weapon to be proud of. I'm not saying that Colt does not have certain standards. However, the comparison of Colt as a "Gold Standard" to the disparagement of other manufacturers is somewhat unfair and incorrect. If the other manufacturers had the same contract advantage as Colt has had the other manufacturer product would be called the "Gold Standard". There are other manufacturers that produce weapons that are of the same quality as the Colt.
If we were discussing that the civilian models do not have automatic fire, it would be different, but thats not what we are discussing. Of course the civilian models do not have automatic fire, its a moot point mostly. We have some weapons that do have automatic fire, actually three round burst, and even those are not Colts any longer. What we are discussing is the comparability of Colt to S&W, and in this forum in terms of the civilain platform owner. In the long run there is simply no differences between the Colt and the S&W other than specific wants or desires for civilian use, as they both put a round down range within the same accuracy range as the M-4 platform was intended to do in the same manner using the same functionality with comparable quality within their repspective scope. It then becomes a matter of preference or favoritism of one over the other, based, basically for most people, upon price - $1200.00 or more for a Colt, or $1000.00 or less for the S&W to do the same thing for the civilain owner.
If the discussion and debate can be civil and respectable, please do not take to PM. I think many of us are interested in learning about the different manufacturing processes the different brands use, and I would like a definitive answer as to if the Colt 6920 really rolls off the same assembly line as the M4, with only a handful of different parts.
You gotta admit though Grant, that Colt does have a history of playing games with civillian ARs in regards to the Mil-Spec area.
High shelf lowers, blocks in the low shelfs, the infamous oversized pins including take downs, and semi auto bolt carriers.
BTW, good to see you here instead of at that other site.
C4,
I have a question about one part of your post earlier on. I've been reading these 2 pages again and again to learn more about AR's in general, own 2 M&P Sports, agree the Colt is still the Gold Standard. Could you explain this statement to me:
"1.Sure can. Many Civy's look at barrel steel and say; "I'm not going to shoot FA so what does it matter?" This is a good question, but the reason why I like the better steel (specifically CMV) is because when I see 4140 used, that is usually a red flag to me that the gun is over gassed and could possibly have an out of spec chamber (more .223 and less 5.56 NATO). So in this case, I am right. This is also a cost cutting measure."
I'll admit I'm over my head in regards to red flag and 4140, I just wonder why 4140 means it is over gassed? Not questioning you, just want to understand and learn more things for future purchases.
You and several others were just as confused. There is no "red flag". 4140 steel does not mean overgassed or out of spec chambers, or that its possible or likely.
Interesting though, I had 17 Colts here, until this morning, and some of them had out of spec chambers straight from Colt yet the barrel steel is not 4140, so I wonder now what color the "flag" should have been for these but I know it would not be gold. All the parts in these were not the same as the Colt military M-4 models either. We are just about finished with our change over to the M&P15OR for our semi-only weapons (yes with 4140 steel). These 17 Colts were destroyed this morning, cut into several pieces and crushed. All of them were a little less than a year and a half old.
It is to professional armorers that work on and repair AR's for a living! I would suggest taking a Dean Caputo AR diagnostics class. He explains all of this in it.
First, Colt makes .223 chambered AR's as well as 5.56 chambered one. So which model were they?
Question for you, how do you know that they were "out of spec?" Which gauge did you use to identify this?
Why would you destroy a Colt AR????
C4
I will tell you that Colt only has ONE assembly line. They also only have ONE set of parts. So a Military issued M4 gets the same parts as a 6920 (less the 14.5 barrel and auto sear).
C4
A Colt 6920 is $1k (not $1200). Most everyone in the AR industry views Colt as the Gold Standard. BCM, DD, S&W, etc, etc. I can even send you a link to where the owner of BCM states that it is a honor for anyone to even consider their AR's as remotely equal in quality to a Colt 6920. I think you would be shocked to learn that most (if not all) of these companies own a 6920 for reference purposes. If it wasn't the standard in the industry, why would they have them??? Clue.
C4
4140 is the cheapest steel used in the AR world. It is a cost cutting measure. So when I see this, two concerns always come to mind (being over gassed and having an out of spec chamber). These concerns are based off of YEARS of experience as a professional armorer and having talked to the best armorers in the business.
Not offended.Warning! What I am about to say will be taken by some as offensive so please read with an open mind!
RRA/BM/Oly/DPMS/S&W, etc all over gas their AR's because they know their main customer base. Meaning that they know the reason why people buy their AR's (because they are cheap). They also know that they are most likely going to shoot the worst (read under pressured) .223 available (Wolf, Tula, etc). This means that the possibility of short stroking is pretty good and is why they over gas their AR's (as they don't want CS calls complaining that their AR's don't run).
C4
They were 6920's
I don't need to take any class. We have people here who are armorers certified by Colt. We also have people who are H&K and S&W certified armorers. These people have years of professional experience in weapons design, construction, testing, maintenance, repair, gun smithing, manufacturing, and instructing. The one with the least experience has 20 years of experiece, the rest have more. Some of them have actually worked for or contracted with these arms manufacturers at one time or another. A few of them also have a Picitinny Arsenal background where they worked with this platform, and actually helped develop specs for weapons. None of them has ever said or endorsed that 4140 steel is a "red flag" and means over pressure and out of spec chambers. When I asked some of them about this they said some people think that but overall its not true. These are professional armorers, among other aspects, who work on and repair AR's for a living as well. It is not true that 4140 steel means a weapon is over gassed or has an out of spec chamber. 4140 steel is well suited to semi-auto fire of civilian AR's.
We know they were out of spec because we checked them and Colt verified it.
We destroyed them bacause we do not have a choice. Most all the others we transfered to other agencies. These were the last ones left and no one else wanted them. We are not permitted to keep weapons over alloted inventory numbers, they had been replaced in inventory by the S&W, and our time limit was up to have them transfered elsewhere so we got a directive to destroy them.
Can't be correct. All the internal parts in the 6920's we disposed of were not the same as the M-4 parts, this was verified by Colt.
Per BATF requirements, all manufacturers of semi-auto AR's for the civilian available market are required to make civilian available AR versions internally different from the military version. These changes mostly involve the bolt carrier, hammer, and milling the internal lower receiver slightly different, and of course the rest of the auto related stuff. Colt can not use all the same set of parts for civilian available models as used in the military M-4.
They may be around $1,000.00 at what you sale them for but the national average ranges $1100 to $1300 depending on where you buy from and the middle of that range is around $1200.00.
I don't profess to know the minds of these manufacturers like you do, but I do know one thing and thats other manufacturers don't have a Colt for other than business reasons. I know this from speaking with them during the selection process to replace our Colts. Why these other companies may have a Colt around also? Not a suprise at all, if I didn't want to upset the bear I would not poke it with a stick either. If a company knows it will either get sued or life made extreamly difficult for them in the market place they will probably not poke the bear and probably not compete for the bears territory. As an example, look at what happened to Bushmaster and Heckler & Koch when they were sued by Colt for, among other things, blurring the distinction between Colt's product and their own when they started going after the civilian and military market with their own M-4 models and Colt claimed they duplicated the look and feel of the Colt. Its the reason why the Heckler & Koch 416 is called the "416" today instead of the "M-4" it was originally called, both Bushmaster and H&K were considered as possible military suppliers for the M-4 to either replace Colt or along with Colt but that was squelched when Colt filed their lawsuit. It cost Bushmaster and H&K millions to fight that lawsuit and they were forced to re-design somewhat, re-market, and re-manufacture somewhat, to "unblur" the distinction costing yet more millions. Other manufacturers learned from that, don't poke the bear.
One of the reasons, among others, some manufacturers keep a Colt for "reference" is to make sure their own product does not duplicate the look and feel of the Colt along with its function specifications, they know what will happen if they get too close and even if they prevail it will still have cost them millions and Colt would still go after them in the market making it extreamly difficult and painful for them.
So to say Colt is some sort of "Gold Standard" is grosely overstating, its like saying a football team is the undisputed champion when they became that way because they were allowed to handicap the other team in every game. So yeah its easy to be a "Gold Standard" when no one else is allowed to compete fully.
Clue? Hardly, its business plain and simple. Its true that Colt makes a fine weapon but other manufacturers do too.
4140 is less expensive per unit (not necessarily cheaper) than for example 4150, but it is not inferior or lack quality as you imply for semi auto civilian AR weapons.
Colt cuts costs also on many of their civilian available models yet keeps their MSRP prices on the average or generally higher than a comparable model from another manufacturer which causes on the average national retail sales to remain higher than comparable models from other manufacturers. They don't pass on the savings from cost cutting to the consumer like other manufacturers may do in their pricing. Yet at the same time they are advertising the Colt "legend" surrounding their involvement in the military platform and using it to suggest in such a manner as to lead people to believe they will get an "original" the same thing as the military models when that is not possible for civilian available AR versions, and the rest is the broad generalizations and opinons from people.
Something I am curious about; Are you going to continue the sales pitch infomercial by continuing to imply people wasted their money on S&W for one reason or another with broad unqualified generalizations and opinions and they should consider or buy a Colt instead because you happen to sale Colts for around $1,000.00?
Not offended.
I would be one of those customers shooting the worst .223. I would expect then that my Colt 6920 would be short stroking since it is not over gassed?
Dang! I was fixing to go shoot either my Sport or my Colt tomorrow but I stumbled on this thread and read the whole thing and now I'm plumb tired out!
But if I should get up enough energy to visit the range, which of these two rifles should I take? I'm all confused now.
Seriously, I bet I'm like most of the posters who are just shooting these rifles for recreation so in the grand scheme of things, what's all the fuss about?
Of course, I would like to know which rifle is likely to be the most reliable so that if I ever had to use one for "serious" purposes I'd know which one to grab!
I know I've posted these photos of my two "modern sporting rifles" many times but I never get tired of showing them off. Second photo shows the other side of the Colt.
C4
Thanks for the explanation. These posts and opinions are very informative.
So you "have people" that know, but it isn't you? Just making things clear. Which 4140 barrel have "your people" examined and found them to not be either over gassed or have an out of spec chamber??? Brand names please.
4140 is the cheapest steel used in the AR world. It is a cost cutting measure. So when I see this, two concerns always come to mind (being over gassed and having an out of spec chamber). These concerns are based off of YEARS of experience as a professional armorer and having talked to the best armorers in the business.
How did you check? What EXACTLY did you do (or your people do) to verify this?? So when you sent the guns back to Colt to check, why did they send them back to you without fixing them? You said you "destroyed" them. This seems odd to me because they should have been fixed from the factory. Sorry, but something is not making sense here.
Wait, you transferred guns that weren't working properly to other LE agencies to use for duty???
Like which parts?? Exact parts please and then I run this by Colt to validate it and report back.
In regards to Colt, they are stuck with some chitty deals worked out between them and their State so their lowers won't let you use an RDIAS. This has nothing to do with any ATF rules or regs.
I am not familiar with national averages, but I do know what people can jump online and get them for.
Lot's AR manufacturers make great guns. At the end of the day (when talking about a fighting weapon), Colt is still the standard.
Is it the end of the world if a Civy AR has 4140 steel? Nope. As I have said over and over there is a stronger possibility of another issue though and buyer just needs to be aware of this and do their research.
Really? Do you have any examples of this? As a Colt Commercial Distributor, I cannot say this is true. For the record, I am also a DD and BCM Master Distr. and Colt's pricing is right inline with them.
From what I know (as a Colt Distr. and having personal friends inside of the company), the consumer IS getting a TDP following, mil-spec weapon (same as the M4) less the capability to make it FA.
I am concerned you haven't been reading what I have written. I am a S&W LE Distr. So I make my living selling S&W products. Truth is, I am a huge fan of S&W so much so that I am typically labeled a "fanboy" for the company on other forums. I have direct input in many of the models you see (M&P MOE, M&P Magpul Edition, SPORT, etc). So no, I don't think ANYONE wasted their money by buying a S&W AR. In fact, they offer some of the best AR's for the money on the market. My main complaint is that they don't make enough of them (as AR sales are 3rd fiddle to them behind revolvers and auto loaders).
So? I go to a doctor when I need medical attention, so that means because I didn't know what was wrong that the doctor is wrong too?
In light of some of your posts; So you "have friends" that know, but it isn't you?
So, big deal, yes we have people that work for us - I guess that secret is out now, darn it.
I've noticed on your web site you do not list Colt armorer certification in the list of your qualifications. So in the interest of making things clear, what exactly are your Colt certifications? Or are these things not shown in the qualifications on the web site simply because your web site has not been updated to show these? After all you did say in one post this making it seem like expert opinion:
I never said we sent these last 17 back to the factory did I? Actually Colt offered to replace the weapons in the end, we decided to wait until the selection process was over before making that decision. When the selection process was complete, we did not go with Colt and it did not fit into our plans to have the Colts replaced and still them on hand as we would not be permitted to keep them because we would be over inventory allotment.
I never said the weapons we did transfer wern't working properly. I said some of the 17 we had left (these had not been transfered which is why we had them left) had out of spec chambers. Would we have transfered them if someone wanted them? Yes, because Colt would have replaced them before we transfered them so the transfee would have gotten new weapons. There were no takers for them, our time limit was up and we got a directive to destroy them.
If we needed you to validate anything we would have contacted you, good thing we didn't though. Colts own validation was enough, after all they are certified. We don't need a report from you.
So, the BATF requirements have no bearing in this? Hmmm, Yeah... ok. I guess then the BATF will be relieved to know that you have it covered then, on second thought maybe not.
People in this forum, and the rest of the civilian AR market, are not buying a fighting gun now are they? If another manufacturer had the contract, for example if Bushmaster and/or H&K had also gotten the contract they would be the standard also. The contract is the only reason Colt or anyone else's opinion about Colt can claim Colt to be the "standard" for a fighting weapon. Similiar to like I posted previously, its easy to be a "standard" when no one else is allowed to compete.
Hmmmm. nope, This is what you said: "I will tell you that Colt only has ONE assembly line. They also only have ONE set of parts. So a Military issued M4 gets the same parts as a 6920 (less the 14.5 barrel and auto sear)."
You did not say "the consumer IS getting a TDP following, mil-spec weapon (same as the M4) less the capability to make it FA"
1. There is not only "one set of parts".
2. The 6920 does not use all the same parts as the military issued M4 and there can not be only one set of parts (exclusive of considering, since you mentioned it, the 14.5 barrel and auto sear.)
3. No, the consumer is not getting a Colt civilian available AR that is the same as the M4, or a civilian available AR that is "TDP following, mil-spec weapon". It may be true that the general TDP or mil-spec parameters are applied in some general aspect (e.g. materials...) because after all the Colt civilian available AR is produced in the same general manufacturing infrastructure, but the civilian available Colt AR is not a mil-spec AR.
Oh, now S&W's are some of the best AR's on the market? Previously you implied they have a short life span, used 4140 steel, and a whole slew of other things, in your presented "expert" opinion which didn't seem to bear out your statements now that they are some of the best AR's on the market. How odd and to use your words, "Sorry, but something is not making sense here."
I'll let you go find someone else to play sales games with because this is getting out of hand. It is greatly offensive that you would imply and express we would purposely endanger the lives of fellow law enforcement officers by intentionally transfering weapons to them that were not working properly.