Re: m1a HELP ME! im goin crazy haha
I have to "chime in", again. The magazine is a pain, to get in. It's not the "push up, and slam", like an AR. It's finicky, on the angle and'push". Needs lots of practice to do it fast.LRRPF52 says it all. I really like mine, and it's a great "piece of history", but it's NOT a "hole driller", for me. It's a nice gun, to have, and fun to shoot. I'm lookin for an AR type, as we speak. Or maybe I'll find my old Valmet. The problem, with the Valmet, is the mags. They're expensive. And the scope mount.<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: LRRPF52</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The M1A is a spiraling whirlpool of cashflow into the drain in most cases, and when a guy wants to get rid of it, prepare to take a major loss IF you can find a buyer.
I lived with M14's/M21's a good part of my life in several different places, and it truly is an aficianado's rifle. I always thought they were more reliable than an AR15, until I started shooting them, and watching others shoot them.
The Sage EBR is a heavy, bulky beast of a stock that has very little advantages to it. After using it for a while, most guys start missing the GI-type stock.
Out of 10 M21's, we would maybe have 2 that shot around 1 MOA. Another 2 or 3 would shoot 1 MOA, then open up to 2 MOA or worse. The others were lucky to be 2 MOA guns. If you're fortunate enough to land on a hummer, keep it. They are rare, even with NM pipes, trigger work, bedding, gas system work, bolt cam slot polishing, welded scope mounts, spiral, spiral, down, down...down $$$$$$$ </div></div>