Hackleback
WKR
Wilson UL barrel
Wiland 15” handguard
No plate and currently no detent for the rear pin.
Wiland 15” handguard
No plate and currently no detent for the rear pin.
Yes, the “plate” above the trigger was too wide(fat) for the slot in the lower, I had to file a bit off the sides to make it fit. Took me a while to figure out what the prob was as I haven’t put very many LPK in before. Building the lower was the hardest(annoying) part of the whole build.Did you have any trouble fitting the trigger in the lower? I always have to file a little from the sides to get them to fit in the rear slot in TN Arms lowers.
This is the one I'm rocking on my folding straight pull AR. It may not be the lightest, but it works great with a bolt carrier chopped behind the firing pin.
Save few ozThis is the one I'm rocking on my folding straight pull AR. It may not be the lightest, but it works great with a bolt carrier chopped behind the firing pin.
Great question, and it's one I wondered about too. With the magazine in place and the bolt locked, there's enough resistance on the carrier to keep it from sliding back. With the hammer down, it's even more secure. But it's not the same level as a standard AR with spring and buffer providing pressure on the carrier.I’m completely ignorant to these builds. Are you guys still running some type of spring in replace of the buffer assembly in order to have some type of resistance when you manually cock the BCG?
That's the lightest TC build I've seen. Great work. Single-shots are so short and handy. Unfortunately, when I miss, I like to miss more than once. What this thread demonstrates is that ARs are the king of the hill when it comes to ultralight hunting arms. And, perhaps most importantly, they are far cheaper and easier to build than custom bolt rifles. It's not even close.
Below is my straight-pull 6mm ARC folding mountain rifle that weighs 4 pounds, 13.6 ounces as shown. Truth be told, I didn't build it to be an ultralight. The BSF barrel, folding stock, half of a steel carrier, and the ARCA rail all add unnecessary weight. Despite that, it came out only 3.6 ounces heavier than my full custom, ultralight switch-barrel Kimber that took over three years of gunsmithing and thousands of dollars more. With the 6mm CM barrel and Burris 4X mini scope, the Kimber weighs 4 pounds, 10 ounces. View attachment 641080
what upper are you using for the AR build? The SOLO 300 upper is great for the southpaws (like myself) but this would be nice for the righties. Also weight of the upper?That's the lightest TC build I've seen. Great work. Single-shots are so short and handy. Unfortunately, when I miss, I like to miss more than once. What this thread demonstrates is that ARs are the king of the hill when it comes to ultralight hunting arms. And, perhaps most importantly, they are far cheaper and easier to build than custom bolt rifles. It's not even close.
Below is my straight-pull 6mm ARC folding mountain rifle that weighs 4 pounds, 13.6 ounces as shown. Truth be told, I didn't build it to be an ultralight. The BSF barrel, folding stock, half of a steel carrier, and the ARCA rail all add unnecessary weight. Despite that, it came out only 3.6 ounces heavier than my full custom, ultralight switch-barrel Kimber that took over three years of gunsmithing and thousands of dollars more. With the 6mm CM barrel and Burris 4X mini scope, the Kimber weighs 4 pounds, 10 ounces. View attachment 641080
Like StupidLightweight said, once you figure them out, ARs are actually really simple if you're moderately mechanically inclined. It's getting an understanding of the whole thing, and how it all operates together, that's the big first step. Once that's in your head, it all starts making sense. Without that, it's kind of like someone is speaking a foreign language.That 6arc is exactly what I want to build. I’m very clueless in the building department though. Where did you source a bolt face for the 6arc? Solo seems to only have 223 size bolt face on their site or am I looking in the wrong place?
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And additionally to StupidLightweight's points, the Solo 300 has a modified part where the gas key normally goes, (I refer to it as the "detent key") . It's a piece with a spring loaded ball bearing that extends into and grabs the cam pin cutout in the upper receiver when the bolt is closed.I’m completely ignorant to these builds. Are you guys still running some type of spring in replace of the buffer assembly in order to have some type of resistance when you manually cock the BCG?
I was just going to post a picture of that and ask if that was what it was for. I figured as muchAnd additionally to StupidLightweight's points, the Solo 300 has a modified part where the gas key normally goes, (I refer to it as the "detent key") . It's a piece with a spring loaded ball bearing that extends into and grabs the cam pin cutout in the upper receiver when the bolt is closed.
6mm ARC bolt face is common. It's the same as 6.5 Grendel and 7.62x39, but due to a few depth differences with the x39, go with a bolt that says Grendel or ARC.
Building ARs seems complicated at first. Once you figure it out, it's so simple as long as you stick to the AR-15 platform. When you go AR-10 (.308 class), all bets are off.