It empties your wallet faster.What's a Carbon barrel do the steel one does not?
Improvement. Still not impressed. I’ll clean and tweak. Really didn’t want to get into the spendy powders like Varget. But that’s up next View attachment 504729
I always thought I wanted a 308 AR. If that is the case, I certainly don't. Would the same apply to a 6.5 Creed AR?You may be aware, but the likelihood of that gun shooting consistently smaller groups with any combination is not good. 1.5-2.5 MOA is about what is realistic for most 308 based AR’s.
No need to go Chinese. I bought one of these and am happy with it in limited use. Dialed right in, good eye relief and eye box. I didn't think the reticle would allow great precision, but it did. No idea how durable it it. https://www.bushnell.com/riflescope...-6x24-illuminated-riflescope/BU-AR71624I.htmlI have a ton of work to do with this rifle. I never knew what an "LPVO" was until last month. But if this rifle stays 3 MOA....I'm not opening up the wallet for a $1500 optic for it. I'll slum some Chinese garbage.
Try this.Improvement. Still not impressed. I’ll clean and tweak. Really didn’t want to get into the spendy powders like Varget. But that’s up next View attachment 504729
I always thought I wanted a 308 AR. If that is the case, I certainly don't. Would the same apply to a 6.5 Creed AR?
Take the brake off.UPDATE: Broke it in a bit. Turn the gas block down to 2. Not quite 100% reliable that low but close. I have a decent stash of Ramshot TAC I no longer need. So I tried it, with some Hornady 168 A Max. Started getting much more consistent 1.5". Called it Good and loaded a bunch of ammo. Have a decent stash of factory Gold Medal Match, which is too good for this gun. Had some older "tactical" ammo that was a 150 Nosler Ballistic Tip from the mid 90s. It shot MOA or a touch under. But I'd traded that away and only had a few left.
Once I get this optic figured out, I'm inclinded to compile all my ammo and rig and bury it up in the hills til I "need" it.
Overall like how it's turning out.
Yes. Large frame AR’s (any 308, 6.5cm, etc) are very sensitive to form and control, let alone just base precision. Basically all the “normal” 308 based AR’s including the SFAR, are generally legitimate 2 to 3 MOA guns when shooting statistically relevant shot group sizes. Yes, they will occasionally put a “sub moa” three shot or maybe even five shot group, but when actually reached for 10+ shot group sizes, no.
Now well built “match grade” ones can be, and often are much better at 1 to 1.5 MOA ten round guns. However, they are extremely sensitive to body position, recoil control, and follow through. You can have a bolt gun and a 308 gas gun that mechanically are sub 1 MOA for instance; let people shoot both and the bolt gun they will generally shoot about 1 MOA. The gas gun, yeah no- they’ll be significantly larger.
Is this observation you make limited specifically to large frame ARs? What are some factors that you feel contribute to this? I'm by no means an expert, but I've built a couple AR-15s, and they've both been extremely accurate, shooting just a touch under MOA groups consistently. I've always steered clear of large frame ARs because of the weight. The benefit of an AR-15 is low recoil, lightweight, compact package. Going to a large frame AR you seem to lose all the benefits of the platform, at least thats my opinion.
Just wondering if your observation was specific to large frame ARs shooting 308 based cartridges?