Re: Look @ the job DPMS did on my .30 remington ar
My experiences,
Rifle #1
24” LR308 – this was one of the first 1,000 rifles built, so we are talking many years ago. Rifle had constant FTF / FTE problems not matter what ammo was used. Sent the rifle back to DPMS, they replaced the original junk plastic mags with the new metal ones, and reworked the chamber and feed ramps. Many years later, the rifle is running flawlessly, will hold 1 MOA or better, zero complaints.
Rifle #2
16” AP4 in 308 - this was about 4 years ago. No problems out of the box, functioned well, good accuracy for a carbine, no problems or complaints.
Rifle #3
18” SASS in 308 - this was about 4 years ago. No problems out of the box, functioned well, 1 MOA or better, no problems or complaints.
Rifle #4
24” LR260 - this was about 3 years ago. No problems out of the box, functioned well, 1 MOA, no problems or complaints.
Rifle #5
20” “Custom” 260 - this was about 2 years ago. Major problem out of the box, functioned well, but would not hold better than 2-3 MOA. Gunsmith checked barrel with scope, and it looked like it was made in someone’s garage, complete junk. Sent it back to DPMS with full documentation of problem. Long story short, it took many phone calls and emails, but I finally got it back almost 4 months later. New barrel was better than the original, but was not up to par with other rifles, would hold 1-1.5 MOA.
My take,
When the company was small and Randy Luth was in the trenches, things were good. When Cerberus bought the company, the buying madness kicked in as Obama was coming in, production went through the roof, and Randy Luth stepped out, things went in the toilet.
Today, you take your chances, you may get a great rifle, you may get a piece of junk.
I do have to say that from what I have seen in the past, if you get a piece of junk DPMS will make it right. In this case, that obviously did not happen, and they should make it right!
Hopefully as the buying & production madness dies down, DPMS can get back on track producing a good product out of the gate.
Best of Luck,
M Richardson