I figured this is probably the right forum...
A couple years ago when the Democrats took control of the Michigan government, I figured they'd try to pass their so-called assault weapons ban. The bill they proposed (which failed, thank God) would have required registration of privately owned "assault rifles" with no ability to transfer (even to heirs) and there were discussions of "Buy outs". Since I like the AR platform and I'd rather keep mine, I decided to build a 6.5G straight pull bolt action upper to try. I used a 16" Monster barrel in a slick side upper, installed an adjustable gas block (cranked closed) and left off the gas tube. I put a couple hundred rounds through it and ended up really liking it. Accurate, easy to shoot, and no lost brass. A stroke of the charging handle (ambi. because I'm left-handed) and the next round is ready to go.
When the Right took back the State House this fall, I decided to convert it to semi-auto. When I removed the gas block, I found that the gas port had filled with jacket material along with a little carbon. It took a while hand twisting a 1/16" drill bit in the port to clean it out but it turned out fine. After the port was clean, reassembly with a gas tube was quick. It works great as a semi-auto too.
It may be a good option for those who live in the 8 "less-than-free" states.
Has anyone else made a SP AR? Just kind of wondering.
John
A couple years ago when the Democrats took control of the Michigan government, I figured they'd try to pass their so-called assault weapons ban. The bill they proposed (which failed, thank God) would have required registration of privately owned "assault rifles" with no ability to transfer (even to heirs) and there were discussions of "Buy outs". Since I like the AR platform and I'd rather keep mine, I decided to build a 6.5G straight pull bolt action upper to try. I used a 16" Monster barrel in a slick side upper, installed an adjustable gas block (cranked closed) and left off the gas tube. I put a couple hundred rounds through it and ended up really liking it. Accurate, easy to shoot, and no lost brass. A stroke of the charging handle (ambi. because I'm left-handed) and the next round is ready to go.
When the Right took back the State House this fall, I decided to convert it to semi-auto. When I removed the gas block, I found that the gas port had filled with jacket material along with a little carbon. It took a while hand twisting a 1/16" drill bit in the port to clean it out but it turned out fine. After the port was clean, reassembly with a gas tube was quick. It works great as a semi-auto too.
It may be a good option for those who live in the 8 "less-than-free" states.
Has anyone else made a SP AR? Just kind of wondering.
John
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