+++this may be the dumbest thread arguing over the most made up fallacies I've ever seen on any gun board. @yonderling said it best
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Join the contest+++this may be the dumbest thread arguing over the most made up fallacies I've ever seen on any gun board. @yonderling said it best
You mean like HRT or JSOC guns that run suppressed 100% of the time yet are not using custom ports or AGBs?Didn't crabs get banned in the last thread like this? More baseless BS from a know-nothing internet tough guy.
Guy, the reason those manufacturers don't use AGBs is they spec the ports based on use case and end user request. Civilian gas port? Big enough to run Tula with no lube dirty. Now throw on a traditional suppressor. Even with an H3 and a Sprinco suddenly its "why is my AR not running right?"
Or if they spec them small like KAC, its "why can't my $2500 rifle run Wolf steel cased?"
AGB lets you do both and then some. Show me a current gen SLR or Superlative or Seekins breaking in the wild in the manner in which you describe. I'll wait. You can find EVERYTHING breaking on the internet, including LMTs, KACS, BCMs, Colts, etc. LMT has a bad heat treat on bolts and they start shearing lugs, you name it. But those gas blocks? Very few and far between and usually some kind of manufacturers defect like the bad heat treat etc.
You sound exactly like those people who said no optics on their rifle cause they just break unlike irons years ago. Now they are standard issue. No one is saying you need an AGB on every rifle, no one is saying give them to every grunt (they have the luxury of being able to spec the gas ports for way less ammo types and only one or two kinds of suppressors, buffers, etc). The point here is that there are a current crop of dead nuts reliable adjustable gas blocks. You not liking that fact doesn't make it untrue.
This block seized up at some point over the course of a barrels life. About 15k rounds. No idea exactly when because I never adjusted or cleaned it. It technically "failed" in that it was no longer adjustable but never caused a malfunction.On the same note, as carbon buildup fouls the AGB, it tended to under-gas the upper and you get short-cycle FTFs.
Yeah but what's more deadly: 9mm or 45ACP?this may be the dumbest thread arguing over the most made up fallacies I've ever seen on any gun board.
Yeah but what's more deadly: 9mm or 45ACP?
I told you exactly what happens but you either choose to ignore what is convenient or your reading comprehension is around that of a potato.Crabs can turn any thread into a dumb thread. Notice how he could provide absolutely NO EVIDENCE to support his claims when asked. He just defaults to "hurr durr SOCOM JSOC" like most larpers, EVEN AFTER it has been explained to him that of course they would not need (in most cases) an adjustable gas block since they are running only few types of ammo on low back pressure suppressors (not to mention the same buffers+springs etc.) and they can instead just spec the gas ports correctly from the factory for those narrow uses. It is willful ignorance at best.
Child please. I was building and fixing small arms for the .mil before you probally ever touched a gun.
If you dont understand how a non moving part is preferable to a mechanical one with a high failure rate, then you clearly dont know as much as you think.
Look at all of the high vollume DI guns used by the military that use adjustable blocks especailly by those running cans.......look at the m4s with agbs...look at the mk18, mk11, mk12, Sopmod block 2, URGI , sr16 , lmt or any issued DI gun/upper.....there are just so many of them. That is what we call a hint.
Go grab yourself a snickers
I don't see any of those makers using your preferred adjustable carrier key either......Or does your argument apply only to gas blocks ?You never seeing it is indicative of low experience level and does not represent actual real world results.
I have never seen " XXXXXXXXXX " so it must not be true.
They have all been tested and run hard and do not hold up.
If they were reliable you would see them on hard use, duty guns. Being able to take a standardized system and add a gas block so you can run a wide a wide variety of ammo and suppressors is a no brainer. Except for the fact its a liability more than a benefit.
Colt, Diemeco, LMT, BCM, KAC, DD, Gieselle...........All of the top DI manufactures in the world who comprise of 95% of hard use guns.........and they don't offer any guns with adjustable gas blocks.
Its always comical when the novices want to argue with SMEs. No wonder soo many get run off. Not worth arguing with the ignorant.
Go read the name of this thread.I don't see any of those makers using your preferred adjustable carrier key either......Or does your argument apply only to gas blocks ?
I've been off the forum for a year and must've missed some stuff. Did Centuriator get banned and return as crabs? Seems about the right level larp. Not quite as vulgar as Primus so I don't think its him.Crabs can turn any thread into a dumb thread.
It was a simple question- can you give a non evasive answer ?Go read the name of this thread.
And then go read this entire thread.
And then think about your post and why it is fail.
This is my last post here.
centuriator; now there was an instigator! lolI've been off the forum for a year and must've missed some stuff. Did Centuriator get banned and return as crabs? Seems about the right level larp. Not quite as vulgar as Primus so I don't think its him.
Based upon my specific purpose of the build, I'll run the system with the AGB, Bootleg, and gas buster charging handle. If it seizes, oh well. I'll run the block so that if the Bootleg fails - in it's entirety - I'll switch it out for a backup BCG that I keep with that load out. The plan will be to run slightly over gassed for reliability's sake with less parts abuse. I'll have to run it for a couple thousand rounds this way, but I'll report back with my findings (if for nothing else, to resurrect this fantastic thread).Looks like many reputable members have chimed in.
Some interesting differing opinions too.
So what are you thinking OP?
This block seized up at some point over the course of a barrels life. About 15k rounds. No idea exactly when because I never adjusted or cleaned it. It technically "failed" in that it was no longer adjustable but never caused a malfunction.
Put it on a new barrel and snapped the adjustment screw right off but the gas setting was about right for the new barrel. Ran it another 13k+ rounds with no cleaning and obviously no adjustment.
I can shine a light in the port and it's clean as can be with no obstructions or fouling buildup. This part of the system is self cleaning and doesn't really need any maintenance.
View attachment 7536106
None at all. The gas port is still round and the tip of the adjustment screw appears intact.Are you able to discern any wear or erosion inside?
Hk416A5 has adjustable gas.Crabs can turn any thread into a dumb thread. Notice how he could provide absolutely NO EVIDENCE to support his claims when asked. He just defaults to "hurr durr SOCOM JSOC" like most larpers, EVEN AFTER it has been explained to him that of course they would not need (in most cases) an adjustable gas block since they are running only few types of ammo on low back pressure suppressors (not to mention the same buffers+springs etc.) and they can instead just spec the gas ports correctly from the factory for those narrow uses. It is willful ignorance at best.
Based upon my specific purpose of the build, I'll run the system with the AGB, Bootleg, and gas buster charging handle. If it seizes, oh well. I'll run the block so that if the Bootleg fails - in it's entirety - I'll switch it out for a backup BCG that I keep with that load out. The plan will be to run slightly over gassed for reliability's sake with less parts abuse. I'll have to run it for a couple thousand rounds this way, but I'll report back with my findings (if for nothing else, to resurrect this fantastic thread).![]()
wish they made one for 308Hk416A5 has adjustable gas.
The first adjustable gas system I ever saw for the AR-15 in production was from JP, about 20 years ago. Some LR shooters using PPC-based AR-15s back in the day had Gerry-rigged AGBs, but I don’t recall anyone before JP producing one.
The #1 driver initially for AGBs on AR-15s was 3-Gun. The second was for precision rifles.
Then we started to see this trend where people with cyclic-rate issues tried to address them with adjustable gas, which may or may not be the ideal choice. (Some gas ports are just too large and do best with a bushing installation/smaller port in the gas block vs a threaded screw impeding into the flow path at a 90˚ angle.
Every single after-market AR-15/AR-10 adjustable gas block I’ve used or have worked on was carbon-welded/seized.
I personally really like the Bootleg carriers now for suppressed use.
I’ve also played with the Sun Devil Adjustable Gas Key, never seized.
One thing I’ve noticed with some AGBs is that due to the additional holes in the block, you need to let them carbon-fill the crevices before setting the gas with whatever load you’re using.
It brings up another issue in that most of the DIY builds don’t have the correct fitting of the gas block to the journal because this usually requires a press-fit jig/fixture in a shop to get proper seal. There shouldn’t be gas leakage coming out from the block and barrel, but you see it as a rule with DIY builds involving the low-experienced layman sliding gas blocks onto barrels with ease.
It’s one of the reasons why I bed my gas blocks, in addition to improving accuracy by deadening the resonant dissonance between the block and the barrel. I hand-select my blocks from a larger pool to get the kind of fit I’m looking for, so smaller ID blocks that require a press-fit will always provide a nice seal that will never open with the different coefficient of thermal expansion between whatever barrel steel and gas block steel is used.
When talking about “over-gassing”, people might recall that US TDP/Mil-Std spec blasters have to demonstrate reliability in Arctic conditions, as well as high temps/high sand/dust. People that live below the frost belt or at lower altitudes don’t ever see extreme cold temps, so it isn’t on most of their radars, but it definitely is for the military.
Right now, I think the Bootleg ABC would make an ideal solution to the Mil guns, as well as suppressed.
Would also provide 90% or more of the benefit of a fully adjustable block for a race gun without messing with fine-tuning and carbon-welding.
This isn’t a knock on any of the several reputable companies that make ABCs, just my perspective on the subject after chasing these rabbits since the 1980s.