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Aero AR Builds – Brilliant Basics

Does the AR 15 have the style and grace of the Bergara B 14?

No.

Is it as easy to use well as the Henry .22.

Not quite.

But it is your favorite rifle? Probably among them, as this is America’s rifle.

My earliest experience with the AR was as a small child sitting in front of the television and watching a report from Vietnam. The first troops were getting the AR rifles. Captured intelligence bulletins from Viet Cong sources were filled with reports of the deadly effect of the ‘black rifle.’ It gave our troops an advantage.  You don’t easily forget these things.

If you love the AR, as I do, sooner or later you will get the bug to build your own. Nothing wrong with that at all. Use quality parts. You don’t have to break the bank, but buy cheap is buy twice.

The AR 15 is in many ways a Mr. Potato Head of rifles. It is easy to build the rifle, easy to modify the rifle.  The stock and forend are important but not the biggest consideration. They are easily changed. The receivers, both upper and lower, once chosen will be lived with for a while. The barrel is pretty important. A rifle enthusiast doesn’t have to be a gunsmith, just a fair parts changer to build, modify, and maintain an AR rifle.

First, take notes as to the type of rifle you really want. Not what you need but what you want. I have not needed a new gun for years. This doesn’t stop the accumulation! A heavy barrel rifle for tagging varmints? A standard carbine? Just get the specs down pat and consider the type of shooting you enjoy. My son knows more about building rifles than I do, he is a trained machinist and has built a number of excellent rifles. When he decided to gift the old man with a rifle he chose Aero Precision parts. I completely agree with this choice. The upper and lower receiver are well machined and finished. 

Aero Precision has been around long enough to establish an excellent reputation. Specs, tolerances and clearance are tight. The receivers are top grade forged aluminum, 7075-T6 aluminum is the preferred alloy.

Fitting the barrel is simple enough. Fit the barrel into the upper receiver tenon. Align the barrel and torque the barrel nut. Next line up and fit the handguard. For maximum accuracy a free floating handguard is best. For defense use and general use inside of 100 yards a free floating handguard isn’t necessary.

[Editor’s Note/Marine HumbleBrag: Actually to 300 or even 500 yards it isn’t necessary, just know how much accuracy you want/need and what flex you are putting on your barrel with your chosen handguard style, even non-floated AR’s tend to be far more accurate than the user until the user dials themselves in.]

I used a MagPul handguard and stock set because it was inexpensive and handy.

Putting the lower receiver together is a bit more complicated. I don’t like fitting mil spec triggers as sometimes it can be a little difficult for me to reach into the receiver and fit these parts together. I like modern custom triggers delivered in one package. The Hyperfire trigger is among my favorites. If you can shoot up to the capabilities of a rifle you will do so with the Hyperfire trigger. Also be careful in the mundane tasks such as installing a trigger guard. A friend actually managed to break his cheap lower while manhandling the build. But then he didn’t have much money in the receiver. I used a Brownells branded 16 inch barrel for this build. Again, it was affordable and results are quite acceptable. 

After watching my son build a rifle and then building another rifle myself, I have the gotten the bug – and the confidence – to perhaps build another. This is a very personal rifle for me. When you build the rifle you know what is inside. You can build something that suits you well with good parts. The trade value may not be much because folks don’t know what is in it and don’t know your skill, but that’s subjective. A parts gun’s value is more difficult to qualify than a factory Core 15, Del Ton or Springfield rifle. That doesn’t matter. What matters is that you have the exact rifle you want, you didn’t build it to sell. The build will be reliable, accurate, and versatile. You could always build another upper in .300 Blackout, .300 HAM’R or another caliber, or a long range rifle.

I don’t know when I will build another rifle but it will be built on Aero parts. The barrel l may get an upgrade and the stock set almost certainly will. But if you want a solid rifle built to last Aero parts are a good bet. 

Optics

Sig Sauer ROMEO7 RDS

Since personal defense is the primary role of this rifle, the Romeo 7 red dot sight was added. The Romeo 7 uses a bright, adjustable dot, and has proven well suited to many shooting chores. The next time I may use a different optic, just for the fun of it. I may also use a Wilson Combat barrel. Just the same, the Aero build featured will keep the Black Hills 52 grain match in a 2.0 inch group at 100 yards, all we can ask of a light carbine. 

Smith and Wesson adds 10mm to the M&P 2.0

NEW: M&P®10MM PISTOL SERIES

INTRODUCING the SMITH & WESSON M&P®10MM M2.0™ PISTOL SERIES: powerful, accurate, efficient. These full-size pistols feature optics cut slides, a new flat-face trigger design, 15+1 capacity, and are available in 4″ and 4.6″ variants.

These new pistols feature forward serrations on the Armornite® finished slide.

The pistols also feature a new, flat-face trigger design. The trigger pull is light & crisp with a tactile & audible reset.

All M&P®10MM models feature an optics-cut slide with optics-height white dot sights for the ability to co-witness.

Frames feature an extended embedded rigid stainless steel chassis for added durability and our 18-degree M&P® grip with interchangeable palmswells. Both the 4″ & 4.6″ models have the option for an extended thumb safety.

So you want to be a pro shooter: the off-season

caleb trophies

As we get into the winter season across much of the US, many clubs in cold weather state reduce or stop having matches entirely. If you live in the South/Southwest this may not be the case, but even for shooters who have chosen to live in good climates, the season from Día de los Muertos to the end of February represents the closest thing we have to an off-season in the shooting sports. But if you want to be a big-boy (or girl) professional shooter, what’s the best way to utilize your off-season?

Don’t kill yourself training

The first thing that’s important to do is actually take an off-season. I’m not saying lock your guns up for the entire winter. But maybe take a couple of weeks off from dry fire and just relax. Or if you train 3-5 times a week, dial back to 1-3 instead, just to give yourself a little space from the gun games. Trust me, two weeks off from dry fire will not kill your chances of making GM next season or winning your state match, unless of course your state match is in two weeks. Speaking of winning or getting a better classification, the off-season is also a great time to

Review accomplishments/failures and set goals for next season

This is actually critical if you want to see success in your next shooting season. I should add the caveat that if you’re just like “I like going to matches and blasting” that’s a goal too, and dammit I love you for being able to treat this like it’s fun. But anyway, goal setting is huge. It is important when you set your goals to 1) be ambitious but also realistic, 2) be able to accept that circumstances may change. For example, for the 2021 season I had set a goal of winning a Revolver championship at IDPA Nationals. Uncle Sam had other ideas and I spent six months in Illinois training Airmen for deployments. However, I was able to pivot my goals and shoot some state level matches, including the tough Illinois State Match. So my goal went from “win Nationals” to “win every state match I shoot,” which I accomplished. Now for 2022 I need to take a hard look at last season, a hard look at what I want to do, and set goals for 2022.

Shoot something fun and try something new

The off-season is also a great time to just fart around and try something new. If you are somewhere that still has matches from Nov-Feb, maybe try a different division, or a different sport. Do you normally shoot Carry Optics? Try Single Stack at a match, or take your USPSA gun and shoot an IDPA match or Steel Challenge. Hell, mix it up and go shoot bullseye. I think it’s vitally important to use the off-season to get some trigger time that isn’t focused on whatever your goal is, and just have some fun sending bullets down range. However, the most important thing to do with your off-season is…

Whatever the hell you want

Don’t listen to me, I’m not your dad. Or do, because ultimately it’s your time, not mine. What I do with my off-season has been working well, but I’ve also been tweaking it for the past 10 years. 2021 concludes my 11th season of shooting with some level of sponsorship, and I’m excited about heading into 2022 with a fresh mindset.

Springfield Armory Introduces… the 1911?

Hot on the heels of the much lauded SA-35 series, Springfield Armory is giving us a… .45 ACP Steel Frame 1911, in Black or Stainless…

Yep, with 3 dot sights…

And a skeleton hammer

And an extended beavertail safety…

And I genuinely can’t find anything really new at all on this 1911.

Maybe that’s the point,

Featuring forged materials and heirloom-quality construction, the Garrison 1911 combines modern materials and design with a heritage spanning back more than a century. Available with classic hot salt blued carbon steel or rust-resistant stainless steel construction, the Garrison is a rock-solid 1911 that gives you a host of modern upgrades along with the strength to provide a lifetime of service. For those who respect tradition and demand the best, the Garrison stands ready.

With more than a century of service behind it, the 1911’s capabilities are beyond question. The Garrison builds upon that solid foundation with the features today’s shooters demand. Forged construction, low-profile yet high-visibility sights, skeletonized hammer, extended beavertail grip safety and much more define this modern take on the proven classic.

Actually, yeah.

That seems to be the entire point that this, it is simply a classic 1911 with the modern creature comforts of the improved sights, hammer, and beavertail.

Cool.

Don’t know why they called it the Garrison though. Like, garrison isn’t fun in the service. All the really annoying crap happens in garrison.

Are LPVO’s Slow in CQB?

Aaron Cowen of Sage Dynamics goes over concept that LPVO’s (Low Power Variable Optics) will slow down a shooter in CQB and therefore, for home defense or personal defense, Red Dots are the superior choice!

While this isn’t Fuddlore it is FuddloreLite, it comes down to over analyzing a problem and failing to take into account variables that are still present but not as visible on a dot.

Are Red Dots Faster?

Yes, but being that a CompM5 weighs in at 8.4oz and an LPVO will generally run about 3x that we are already talking about different perfect conditions results based on mass. Add in that LPVO’s have an eyebox and it becomes easy to see why the myth exists.

The myth isn’t that LPVO’s are slower. They are, academically speaking. The myth is that is practically matters given all the other factors and benefits of an LPVO optic and any given shot problem.

Spooky Scary Scope Shadow

“Take what you can get in the time you have and send the shot, trust your optic.” – Steve Fisher

You can shoot through scope shadow. Period. There is no amount of parallax or distortion based on imperfect eye position that is going to throw your shot more than sight offset is. If you can see the reticle you can snap off your shots. Marines were over shooting their ACOGs (looking over the sight or looking down the fiber optic) because at that distance you won’t miss.

Every discussion on LPVO v Red Dot goes this way. Dot guns are fast but they don’t see any further than your eyes, LPVO’d guns are nearly as fast and do allow you to see and gather information further out. Your trade off isn’t speed nearly as much as it is size on the gun. In a perfectly controlled setting the red dot on a close target will be faster. In a setting with multiple variables that also influence the time onto target, more than just *beep go!*, the time to find the target and place the shot for the environment begin to favor LPVO’s, especially on anything requiring some precision.

So the myth, that an LPVO hinders you, is ultimately that you are taking too much time to get a clear perfect sight picture when you don’t need to. You aren’t with the red dot either, you’re grabbing the best you can in the time you have, but because you aren’t seeing any scope shadow or other distortions you’re trusting the sight picture you see.

You do not need an offset, or top, or any other red dot optic in conjunction with an LPVO for CQB. You need to trust the capabilities of your optic. Trust it by verifying it. Shoot close, shoot with dirty shadowy sight pictures, shoot at the edges of the glass and see what variances there are. You’ll be surprised by how little there is. You’ll probably find, also, that it’s well within your acceptable accuracy requirements too.

The one slowing you down is you, not the optic, you aren’t trusting it the way you trust the dot.

So start.

Gun Hipster Before Gun Hipsters – VZ. 58

My favorite vz. 58 fact has to be that, in the movie Lord of War, renting 3,000 real vz. 58 rifles was the most economic way to fill the racks upon racks of weapons needed for the scene.

Czechoslovakia was a nation state created at the end of World War I when it declared independence from Austria-Hungary. It was part of the Warsaw Pact and post-WWII, when the Soviets said everyone needs to shoot 7.62×39 for logistics, they didn’t just pick up AK’s.

They made their own cooler different rifle, because screw mainstream AK fans! IPA’s are awesome! Or something like that.

What the combined Czech and Slovak nation did was produce an excellent short stroke piston rifle that they made nearly a million of and when it hit the states, like the CZ firearms, the vz. 58 was an inexpensive hidden gem of a fighting rifle.

It still has the rock in magazine and fixed charging handle of its AK peer, but the open top piston operating system and lever style safety sets it apart exteriorly. Beyond the basic shape and the fact they emerged out of a similar tech base, they are entirely different weapons. Nothing but the ammo being compatible between them.

The rifle served until after the cold war, still does in some places, but with the Czech’s the Bren and Bren 2 are bringing the up to NATO modern standards of small arms.

STRAIGHT TALK – Our 2A Rights & Freedoms

(from huffingtonpost.com)

[Ed: These excerpts from Personal Defense World come to DRGO courtesy of SCOPE-NY’s Richard Rossi.]

Some facts that will never see daylight in our National News Media or Social Network sites.

United States Court of Appeals – Fourth Circuit district.
Ruled that 18-to-20-year old’s have the same Second Amendment rights to purchase handguns as older Americans do. Judge Julie Richardson wrote; “when do Constitutional rights vest? Our nation’s most cherished constitutional rights vest no later than 18. And the 2nd Amendment’s right to keep and bear arms is no different”.

Federal Court Overturns Draconian Under 21 Handgun Ban – Personal Defense World

Study: High Gun Sales Didn’t Cause Rise in Violence.|
Despite the anti-gun advocates claim that violence will rise with gun sales. From the study by the Journal of Injury Epidemiology: “Results suggest much of the rise in firearm violence during our study period was attributed to other factors, indicating a need for additional research.”

Anti-Gun Researchers Find Rising Violence NOT Linked to High Gun Sales – Personal Defense World

Record Year for Constitutional Carry.
This year America has added five additional (Iowa, Montana, Tennessee, Texas and Utah) states to the list of states that have Constitutional Carry laws.  Actual 5 new states in one year is quite a remarkable feat. What caused the number of “permitless” carry states to jump by nearly ‘one-third in a single year? It is and was the Democratic majority in Congress and Joe Biden in the White House pushing their agenda and anti-gun schemes to strip Americans of their Second Amendment Rights.

Constitutional Carry Bills Moving Forward in Numerous States – Personal Defense World

Meteoric Rise of NEW Gun Owners Continues.
Our country has added 8.3 million new gun owners even in this plague ridden 2020. According to the NSSF (National Shooting Sports Foundation), another 3.2 million decided to exercise their 2nd Amendment right for the first time in 2021.  This data was derived from a nationwide survey of firearms retailers conducted by the NSSF.  Responses indicated 33.2% of customers, or 3,247,351, purchased a firearm for the very first time in that six-month period.

Gun Sales Figures Continue to Outpace Pre-Covid Numbers – Personal Defense World

Anti-Gunners Keep Spreading Lies
Even though many studies have proven that “Gun Buybacks” don’t reduce violent crime or suicides, Santa Barbara District Attorney Joyce Dudley recently decided to make up some facts of her own when promoting a local “buyback“.  She stated: “In fact, data suggests that buybacks have led to a drop in firearm suicide rates of almost 80 percent.”   Of course, Dudley’s claim is false.   In a recent National Bureau of Economic Research study, it concluded, “We find no evidence that Gun Buyback Programs reduce suicides or homicides where a firearm was involved.”  Anti-gunners are willing to make up facts when it could help their cause and no one holds them responsible in our News Media.

Gun Buybacks: Anti-Gun Policy That Continues to Misfire – Personal Defense World

Guns For My Bodyguards, But None For You!
Whose life is worth saving, anyway?  Some politicians just don’t get it, and gun-ban-loving U.S. Representative Cori Bush, D-Missouri, is at the top of the list. Not only is she anti-Second Amendment but she is also for ‘DEFUNDING POLICE”.  However, she has no problem what-so-ever in having an armed detail of bodyguards following her around.  She ranted on CNN “You would rather me die?” when she was called-out for her stance. How ironic that her life is worth more than your or your family members.  The average Law-abiding citizen does not have the luxury of hiring a bodyguard detail to keep them safe. She can’t fathom our need to protect ourselves as provided by our Second Amendment.

The Ugly Truth About Gun Control: Why Your Life Isn’t Worth Saving – Personal Defense World

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Gunday Brunch #27: Should Kyle Rittenhouse go free?

UPDATE: The jury has decided, Kyle Rittenhouse goes free on all charges.

The boys are back to offer their commentary on the ongoing saga of the Kyle Rittenhouse trial. Please note, this episode was recorded Thursday the 11th, so since you’re listening to it after then there may have been developments that they didn’t cover. Also, we aren’t lawyers. We just know a few.

Favored Hunting Rig – The Valmet 412 12ga/30-06 O/U

JJ breaks down his favorite gun, a combination rifle/shotgun by Valmet, in this video.

Perhaps the world’s most versatile hunting tool, the Tikka-owned, Finnish-bred Valmet 412 is a break-action over/under firearm featuring a 12 ga. vent-rib barrel stacked over a venerable 30-06. The result is a gun that handles and points like a shotgun for quick snap shooting at birds with a rifle available for long-range stuff. it comes with an integral flip-up sight for medium-range distances and an integral, quick-attach scope mount for when the shot calls for really reaching out there a few hundred yards. It’s quality built all the way around and the one gun JJ chooses when he doesn’t know if he’ll see a turkey, a hog, a deer, a quail or any other critter that needs pluggin’.

How to Lose a Murder Trial in 10 Days

If you wanted to know how the prosecution in Kyle Rittenhouse’s trial on double homicide and attempted homicide is going? This NPR headline is very very explanatory in that regard.

For anyone watching the trial through headlines, your perception of events if probably that of your preferred media outlet. I like checking in on multiple. If headlines are consistent, the story doesn’t have an angle to grind for one side or another politically. If the headlines are vastly different, there are usually agenda and narrative driven motives for that.

One of the most interesting developments is people who travel in more liberal circles tuning into the trial and realizing that the people Rittenhouse shot… are all white. That is how deep the misinformation pool is here and how much of a disservice outlets are doing to the reader bases when they are allowing agenda to obfuscate the facts on the ground. There are people convinced that Kyle shot three black men for no reason, not a white pedophile, a white domestic abuser, and a white guy who pulled a gun on him and then lied about it afterwards.

There are conservative leaning sources who think the trial is a slam dunk for Rittenhouse… I assure you it isn’t.

It looks good for the defense, especially on the murder charges, but it isn’t over until the jury sings.

The trial itself has been a madhouse. The prosecution has actively antagonized the judge to the point where that conflict is overshadowing the Rittenhouse v State of Wisconsin conflict sometimes. It is also chillingly eye opening to many on just how a real court, and not one on a TV script, can proceed to shape a narrative for the jury. There are things the public knows that the jury has to “not know” for purposes of the trial. Rosenbaum’s sexual crimes are among those, but could enter into evidence if the prosecution took a certain line of commenting.

There is a deep well of folks who had already made up their minds and any result different than their preconceived notion of what “justice” would look like will piss them off. They will be sure to say so in the comments too. The louder the opinion often goes with the more misinformed on the case too. The number of people still convinced that Kyle was driven up to Kenosha by his mom with the rifle in hand are numerous, for example.

All of this said…

This looks like Kyle is going to walk, at the least on the murder charges which are the ones that matter on the national level. The headline above from NPR indicates the prosecution knows they are losing. But they want something to stick to Kyle for at least the political and social victory it could mean.

While a total acquittal won’t convince the folks who made the snap judgement that Kyle was guilty, that isn’t really the core focus of the case for the 2A crowd. The core of the case is, ‘will self defense law be affirmed?’ and will that bring the American collective consciousness to a better understanding on how use-of-force works in the nation.

I expect this to have long long lasting influence on modern self-defense theory and how laws are crafted moving forward. While I don’t see significant changes in the law coming, I do foresee a push by activist legislators to add amendments on ‘instigatory behavior’ or other participation based language nullifying or changing how self defense law would be applied. I equally foresee none of those people realizing how negatively it could impact the communities they are claiming to be standing up for and doing a damn piss poor job of it.

Kind of like the prosecutor in this case, Binger. Anywho, we’re almost done and we’ll see what the jury finds.

Fix It Sticks Compact Pistol Kit Review

The Fix It Sticks Compact Pistol kit is just about the perfect addition to your range bag if you’re a serious shooter. It can fix a broken revolver on the fly. You can adjust an optic, or do any other repair task. This kit seems to be the perfect answer for your problems. With a number of bits and a torque wrench, this thing is ready to go.

Repair Kit on the go

I’m a big fan of compact repair kits. It’s a known fact that I am a revolver enthusiast. When revolvers break, they usually need tools to fix. A kit like the Compact Pistol Kit from Fix It Sticks means I don’t have to carry my entire tool box around with me to matches. I can throw this in my range bag and have 99% of the tools I’ll need.

My only knock on the kit is that I’d like it to have a few more sizes of torx bit, and seems like manufacturers are throwing all kinds of different torx screws on guns and optics these days. Having a full run of bits to deal with this would be nice. Of course, I can just throw a set of bits from my full on tool kit into my bag, but again that sort of feels like it defeats the purpose.

Final Verdict

Regardless, I really like the Fix It Sticks Compact Pistol Kit. For $180 it’s reasonably affordable and think nicely matches the quality of the tools in the kit. Plus, because they’re designed in American and made in Taiwan, no communist regimes were supported by you buying one! Plus, if you like bicycles, the same company also makes portable tool kits for that. You can ride your bike to the range, fix a broken chain, and fix your gun.

Five Guns Springfield Armory Should Reboot – Move over SA-35

Springfield Armory surprised the hell out of me, and I’m betting most people with the release of the SA-35. The SA-35 is the Springfield Armory take on the Browning Hi-Power. Not only did Springfield Armory bring the beloved pistol back, but they also made a number of improvements. This includes the removal of the magazine safety, modernized sights, and a 15 round magazine. Plus, the MSRP is a mere $699, making it an affordable option for shooters desiring the out-of-production Hi-Power.

That got me thinking, what other gun should Springfield Armory bring back or reboot? As I thought about this, I couldn’t settle on a single gun. Instead, I came up with five I’d love to see get a reboot. I want these rebooted with the same idea. High-quality guns, at a great price, with improvements here and there, but still keeping up with some historical accuracy.

What Else Should Springfield Reboot?

Winchester M1897 Trench Gun

Not just the standard or riot M1897, but I want the WW1 trench gun variant. This model uses a ventilated, metal handguard and a big bayonet lug complete with an M1917 sword bayonet. I want this reboot to lack the disconnect and be a fully hammer-fired shotgun just like John Moses Browning wanted it to be.

Courtesy Cowan Auctions

I want to be to slam fire this gun and empty that five-round tubular magazine in just a few seconds. Trying to get a WW1 Trench configuration these days requires you to spend a butt load of money on an antique or buy an antique and have it heavily modified by a smith. Personally, I want a shooter, and a modern reproduction for less than 700 bucks sounds great to me.

M3 Grease Gun

This seems like a natural weapon to reboot. What’s hot right now? Well, PCCs and Subguns are hot, as are retro guns. Combine the two, and you have a winner. The M3 was always made to be cheap, and I don’t see why it couldn’t be made cheap to this day. Because the ATF is lame, it would have to be a closed bolt pistol, but Springfield could team up with SB Tactical to develop a brace.

This big chunky 45 ACP would be a blast to shoot. Hell, if they got popular, it’d be great to suppress. Sure it wouldn’t be efficient, but a reboot of the M3 Grease Gun would be a ton of fun. Plus, has anyone ever done it? We can get Thompsons, but no Grease Guns. Make it for 700 or less, and I’m a purchaser.

BAR

I don’t mean the BAR hunting rifle, but the BAR from World War 2. The massive, Browning designed rifle in .30-06 that weighs 16 to 18 pounds and holds a mere 20 rounds. Admittedly, this can’t be a cheap reproduction. However, I’d imagine they could do it for under two grand, or I’d pray as such. I’m not asking for historical construction, and maybe they can make it with modern materials and processes to drive down the price.

Heck, I wouldn’t mind seeing a 308 BAR or even a mini BAR in 5.56 just for fun. The BAR is such a neat design that served for quite a long time. In many ways, it’s the first SAW utilized in fire and maneuver warfare. A reboot of the BAR wouldn’t be practical, but it would be cool.

M1917 Revolvers

The M1917 revolvers were made by S&W and Colt during WW1 to supplement the 1911. We simply couldn’t produce enough, so 45 ACP revolvers with moon clips were the answer. I’d prefer the S&W M1917, but I’d take either as a comeback. I’d love to see a modern replica with the retro revolver stylings.

Bring them back at an affordable price point with plenty of moon clips, and you’d have an extremely fun revolver, especially if they look as nice as the SA-35. Springfield Armory hasn’t done a revolver, but this would be the perfect six gun to reboot as a first go around.

M16A1

Retro rifles are hot right now, and Springfield already makes ARs, so this seems like an easy extension of that line. Brownells and Troy make retro guns, but more options are always nice, and lower-priced options would be fantastic. The M16A1 might not rock rails, and attaching optics isn’t super easy, but it’s light and handy.

The fixed stock, iron sights, and light design make it a fun shooter but also somewhat practical. Heck, you make an M16A1 with an optics rail, and it would be the handiest ranch rifle out there. However, make the fixed carry handle model first, then do other options. Also, if they do it for less than 800 bucks, it’d be tough to beat.

Reboot or Sequel?

I like the reboot theme the industry is going through right now. Colt brought back the Python, Glock did the P80, and Springfield Armory hit us with the SA-35. A lot of these guns have a rich history but are impossible to get hands-on without several thousand dollars and some Gunbroker patience. If you rebooted the five guns above, I’d be more than set…for a little while anyway.

Faking the Funk – Walther Warns of Fake Sites.

While we do believe that “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery”…
We want you to be aware that WaltherArms.com is the only authentic website for Walther Arms.
There are two imposter websites you should be aware of:
1. WaltherArmsStore.com
2. WatlherArmsShop.com

So, don’t be fooled by the above folks. Walther Arms is the place to go for Walther Firearms. Just like fake Facebook accounts, fake Instagram profiles, and fake Nigerian Princes in your email offering you half their fortunes for access to your banking info, scam sites exist to try and get just enough fools to buy in. They range from using massive markups to make money to outright lying about having product to ship. Take the money and run, that’s their plan.

So, buyer beware.

‘Poison’ Pills – The AK74’s

9-Hole and the AK74…

For those still under the belief that the AK47 was superior to the M16 in some way during the Vietnam war, I present to you that mimicry is the most sincere form of flattery.

While the Soviets didn’t copy Stoner’s rifle (they had a working rifle design), they did copy the 5.56 ammunition. The effects both logistically and terminally of using LWHV (Light Weight High Velocity) were clear to the Soviets from the study of Americans with the M16. In typical Soviet efficient fashion the simply took the improvements they wanted to implement and made the caliber change in their AK platform. Nyet, rifle is fine… new bullets though.

Greater effective range, greater accuracy, lower recoil.

The AK took the legacy .30 caliber and just powered it down, 7.62x54r to 7.62×39, and the Soviets did that one rifle generation before the Americans and NATO. We kept .30 one iteration longer with the FAL, G3, and M14. We then jumped ahead with the M16, taking the lighter all purpose rifle concept into the ammunition too.

This ended up with both us and the Soviets in a two (for the Soviets at large, three) caliber solution. We had the light rifle ammo and the heavier machine gun ammo which was our legacy .30’s. We also used the .30’s for our precision rifles and anything that needed mass to retain some energy to reach beyond the soft 500 meter mark of our service rifles. Not all the Soviets went 5.45 and a solid mix of 7.62 AKs remained, especially in rear echelon units where there was no rush to upgrade.

We in the US would mimic that pattern as the services increasingly selected the M4 and M4A1 and retired the M16A2 and A4’s from the primary roles during GWOT.

A 5.45 is one I am still hunting personally, I believe I know what I want but waiting on availability. Ammo is also pretty steep for them at the moment so there is that.

But it is a great round, some prefer it to 5.56 even.

Five Unique Rifles of the USMC

The Marine Corps is all about their rifles and is all about being a Corp of riflemen. Along the way, the USMC has largely followed the rest of the military in terms of rifle adoption. They used the M1 Garand, the M14, the M16, so on and so forth. However, the Marine Corps will occasionally depart from the norm, and I’ve gathered five unique rifles used by the Marine Corps. With November being the birthday month of the Marine Corps, it seemed timely.

M1895 Lee Navy

Other services love to point out that the Marine Corps is a department of the Navy. This is meant to point out the small size of the Marine Corps, and that big Navy is their daddy. That’s not always a problem. One of the unique rifles of the Marine Corps was one of the best rifles of its day. The M1895 Lee Navy saw adoption by the Navy, and in 1895 that means the Marines adopted it.

While the Army utilized the Krag, the Marines and Navy used the more modern and more capable Lee Navy rifle. This straight-pull bolt action rifle offered a faster action than the Krag and chambered an early smokeless cartridge called the 6mm Lee Navy. 6mm Lee Navy ammunition was lighter, and the Marines could carry more of it.

Courtesy of Invaluable

This proved quite handy in the Spanish-American war, where the outnumbered Marines outshot the Spanish Mausers during the race for Cuzco Well. The Marines faster firing rifles, and the fact they carried more ammo allowed them to make the most of their numbers.

SAM-R

SAM-R Stands for Squad Advanced Marksman Rifle, and this USMC invention predated the Marine Corps adoption of the Mk 12. The SAMR came from the Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory to produce a modern designated marksman’s rifle equipped with a higher-powered optic for long-range precision.

Marines from Golf Battery, Battalion Landing Team 1st Bn., 6th Marines, the ground combat element of the 22d Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), aim in during a live fire exercise in Albania during the MEU’s recent amphibious landing exercise (PHIBLEX).

The Marine’s unique rifles were assembled at the Precision Weapons Section of the Weapons Training Battalion out of Quantico.

They made use of an M16A4 with a free-floating rail system, a stainless steel match grade barrel, and an M16A1 trigger assembling. Burst triggers suck and decrease the accuracy of the shooter by being crappy triggers (their break weight changes).

A designated marksman from Alpha Co., Battalion Landing Team 1st Bn., 6th Marines surveys the area around his task force’s headquarters in Khas Oruzgan, Afghanistan during Operation PEGASUS. BLT 1/6 is the ground combat element of the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable).

The Marine Corps then tossed on a bipod, and a variety of day optics were utilized along the way. The most common being the TS-30A2, aka the Leupold Mark 4 M3 3-9×36 scope. Marines also used ACOGs on these rifles, but the fixed 4X limited the Marine’s long-range precision accuracy.

MK13 Mod 7

While a lot of the professional sniping community moved to semi-auto platforms, the Marine Corps clung to its bolt guns! Well, kind of. The Marine Corps employs tons of semi-auto sniper rifles, but they also field a series of unique rifles that date back to 1966. The Mk13 Mod 7 is a Remington 700 placed into an Accuracy International Chassis system.

The Marine Corps didn’t need another 7.62 NATO rifle, and the Mk 13 Mod 7 utilized the powered .300 Winchester Magnum. This caliber swap extended the effective range of Marine snipers to 1,300 meters. To allow them to see that far the scope of choice is the Nightforce Advanced Tactical Riflescope.

The Mk 13 Mod 7 will wear a suppressor and bipod to increase accuracy and hide the signature of snipers in their hides. This advanced rifle represents a departure from the M40, which has severed with Marines since Vietnam.

USMC DMR

Early in the Global War on Terror, the Marines realized they needed a new type of rifle. They needed an accurized rifle with an optic at the squad level. This caused the Marines to produce the USMC Designated Marksman Rifle. The term DMR now applies to a variety of rifles, but the Marine Corps is creative in creating unique rifles, not naming them.

Lance Cpl. Jeremy R. Riddle, designated marksman for Task Force Kabul, looks through his scope of his designated marksman rifle, (modified M-14) at any threats on and outside the U.S. Embassy compound here in Kabul, Afghanistan. He is here to assist the task force in gathering information and precision marksmanship. The task force is part of the 4th Marine Expeditionary Brigade (Anti-Terrorism), and have been here since December. They are here to provide security at the embassy and deter any enemies’ threats.

The USMC DMR took old M14s and accurized them. This isn’t a great idea as they can lose that accurization when disassembled. However, in 2001, they didn’t have a lot of options, and the M14 worked. The DMR predated the M39 and utilized an M14 with a 22-inch stainless steel match-grade Krieger barrel.

A McMillian Tactical M2A fiberglass stock offered a pistol grip and an adjustable cheek riser. Attached to the stock were a Harris S-L bipod and a Leupold Mark 4. Although, on occasion, the Unertl M40 10X was also used. These DMRs stayed in use until 2014 with certain teams.

M27 IAR

The Marines pulled a rather sneaky move. They started a program to replace the SAW with an automatic rifle, and along the way, used it to replace the M16A4 and M4 in the hands of infantry Marines. The M27 IAR now serves as the general issue rifle to Marine combat arms. Its brother, the M38, also serves as a DMR with a more powerful optic.

CAMP HANSEN — Lance Cpl. Zachary A. Whitman, a shooter with the III Marine Expeditionary Force detachment, familiarizes himself with the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle in preparation for the Australian Army Skill at Arms Meeting 2012. AASAM is a multilateral, multinational event allowing Marines to exchange skills tactics, techniques and procedures with members of the Australian Army as well as other international militaries in friendly competition. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Brandon L. Saunders/released)

HK built the M27 IAR based on the HK416. The M27 IAR promised more firepower and accuracy than the old M16 series of rifles. I can attest that every IAR gunner in my company shot Expert with quite high scores on qual day.

The M27 IAR proved that accurate fire could work as well as a volume of fire from a belt-fed. Thus, the M27 IAR became one of the first unique rifles the Marine Corps ever issued en masse. The move made the Marines more agile and more lethal. At the end of the day, that’s exactly what you want Marines to be.

Unique Rifles and the USMC

We started this list with a rifle the Marines used outside the norm in 1895, and we’ll end with one used in 2021. Throughout time the Marine Corps has independently developed different programs to make the individual Marine a better, more accurate warfighter. These programs, like the SAM-R and DMR, became concepts used around the entire military. Being the smallest branch has its advantages, and one of those advantages is the freedom to be creative problem solves. In the Marine Corps, most problems can be solved with rifles, and this list is a testament to that.