You fire every factory loaded round based on that same faith.
Just sayin....
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LOL.. quite true. There are things I can control and then there are things I can't.
You fire every factory loaded round based on that same faith.
Just sayin....
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
In laymans terms, AR bolts lock up directly into the barrel. If the parts are milled correctly then there is no way for the headspace to be off. Short of machining the parts again there is no way to adjust it either. The action (upper) just hold the parts in alignment but doesn't really do anything after lockup.Why do y'all feel that way?
In laymans terms, AR bolts lock up directly into the barrel. If the parts are milled correctly then there is no way for the headspace to be off. Short of machining the parts again there is no way to adjust it either. The action (upper) just hold the parts in alignment but doesn't really do anything after lockup.
In most other firearms the action bridges the gap between the barrel and bolt. Screwing the barrel in or out adjusts the headspace. The bolt locks into the action and the barrel is screwed into the action. The action holds the two together.
You can actually lock your bolt into the barrel without them even being in an upper in an AR. Technically you could safely fire it that way too.
This is why it is unusual to check the headspace on an AR.
AR's design are the reason anybody can build one. The most important part (headspace) is already checked and safe. Everything else is just knocking pins in and tightening threaded parts. Easy peasy.Thanks for that explanation, very informative. I was never quite clear on that and have always checked with a pair go no-go gauges. I probably won't continue to do that now. I have a bolt ejector tool, but it's still a PIA to do it.
In laymans terms, AR bolts lock up directly into the barrel. If the parts are milled correctly then there is no way for the headspace to be off. Short of machining the parts again there is no way to adjust it either. The action (upper) just hold the parts in alignment but doesn't really do anything after lockup.
In most other firearms the action bridges the gap between the barrel and bolt. Screwing the barrel in or out adjusts the headspace. The bolt locks into the action and the barrel is screwed into the action. The action holds the two together.
You can actually lock your bolt into the barrel without them even being in an upper in an AR. Technically you could safely fire it that way too.
This is why it is unusual to check the headspace on an AR.
In laymans terms, AR bolts lock up directly into the barrel. If the parts are milled correctly then there is no way for the headspace to be off. Short of machining the parts again there is no way to adjust it either. The action (upper) just hold the parts in alignment but doesn't really do anything after lockup.
In most other firearms the action bridges the gap between the barrel and bolt. Screwing the barrel in or out adjusts the headspace. The bolt locks into the action and the barrel is screwed into the action. The action holds the two together.
You can actually lock your bolt into the barrel without them even being in an upper in an AR. Technically you could safely fire it that way too.
This is why it is unusual to check the headspace on an AR.