Re: Gas systems ? Piston or direct impingement?
Thank you for the infor I appreciate it . granted that all decisions are a personal preferance and with that said this will also be one . the reason I ask here is that there are many times that I have received extremely valuable comment, opinion, information etc about the rifle that I have already bought and sold.
Did not want to light a fire storm but the search did not come up with any good links.
Thanks again
Bill
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: ORD</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Bill Stoffels</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Your thoughts??? </div></div>
Thoughts? NOT ANOTHER @#$%ing DI VS. PISTON THREAD!!!
You'll get all sorts of argument, some anecdotal and some factual/proven data re: the pros/cons of one operating system versus another. With that said, essentially what they are claiming is accurate at least in part (although I'm sure that they can back up all their claims with some evidence just as others will try to refute it with other evidence). Piston guns don't $#!T where they eat like DI guns do so to speak, so arguably, they'll run cleaner for longer and require at least somewhat less maintenance than a comparable DI gun under like conditions, number of rounds fired, etc. Piston guns also run cooler than DI guns under sustained fire, which in turn will reduce wear/tear on components and potentially prevent catastrophic failures of components like gas tubes for one, etc. There have been tests on this issue of 1k of sustained fire in both platforms wherein the gas tube on the DI gun failed after ~400 rounds or so and failed to finish the test...just by way of one example.
As for "ease-of-assembly," etc., etc., etc....I don't see how the piston operating system, in and of itself, really makes change in barrel lengths, calibers, etc. any quicker/slower than a DI gun.
As for whether "one is better than the other"...well, they both have their merits and both have their drawbacks. Have a read through some of the heated discussions on this same topic and you'll see where some folks come down on the issue...but I'll save you some heavy reading time and tell you that there is no right (or wrong) answer, just differences of opinion!
Only you can weigh the evidence on DI vs. piston and determine which is the better option for you given your needs/wants/preferences. </div></div>