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Jeriah wrote:http://www.calguns.net/calgunforum/showthread.php?t=226178
This thread suggests I am GTG with either standard or H. Any reason I shouldn't try my standard before spending another $22 on a heavier buffer? Like, will it blow up my face? Also, I'm using mostly shit (Wolf, Herter's) ammo, which is probably underloaded. Is this a factor one way or another?
TheLastOne wrote:my standard spikes was insufficient with wolf with my bcm upper at milcopp. i ordered an h as soon as i got back
williaty wrote:Again, if the gas system is properly designed and manufactured, the standard CAR buffer is the "correct" buffer. The heavier buffers are for when the system is "overgassed", meaning that there's a higher than expected gas pressure and volume blown back into the action. This can be due to anything from Bushmaster making the gas ports too large in order to get them to cycle dirty with weak cheapassed ammo to a necessary compromise to get extreme SBRs to work to the result of gas port erosion. Weaker ammo in 223 will likely require a lighter buffer to cycle while mil-spec ammo in 556 may be tolerant of a heavy buffer. BCM says CAR or H, IIRC. The gun will run safely with either. My methodology for picking a buffer has been to function test the gun for the first time on a CAR, then increase buffer weight until the action stops locking open on an empty mag on the rage under ideal conditions. Then lighten up one buffer weight to ensure
reliable function in the real world.




Jeriah wrote:The upper I am ordering has a mid-length gas system, and an auto BCG. Common Internet wisdom seems to be that a middy is fine with a carbine buffer, and it's carbines that need H buffers, BUT that the auto BCG changes things somehow. That's the part I don't understand.
OK, that's starting to make sense. I think I'm going to leave the H buffer off my order, and if the action seems to slam too hard (moving too fast) and/or I'm getting failures to feed or something, I will immediately order an H buffer. (I will bring my old upper to the range as a spare, of course, so I'm not out a day of shooting when I find this out.)





TheLastOne wrote:Plus, you'll likely get a hat to keep the rain off!
Congrats on the buy, give us a picture when it shows up (and it will ship tomorrow, those fuckers at BCM are really good about getting stuff out).

Jeriah wrote:So, an H is better if it works at all, because it makes shit run slower, and you want shit to run as slow as possible, as long as it does go all the way?
And a CAR might work but might cycle too fast, in which case I might get failures to feed or something?






Vicarious_Lee wrote:Jeriah wrote:So, an H is better if it works at all, because it makes shit run slower, and you want shit to run as slow as possible, as long as it does go all the way?
And a CAR might work but might cycle too fast, in which case I might get failures to feed or something?
As I understand it, this is exactly the case. Dave and others have said that you want as much mass as will reliably cycle your ammo. Slow and smooth. Less chance of banging your BCG and "bolt bounce". I have a DD middy with DD BCG and H-buffer. It will cycle everything (Hornady, Tracers, M855, Wolf Military Classic, etc.) EXCEPT some cheap-shit Tula that won't even cycle in my overgassed Sig 556 on the low setting. So, to me that means that I've got it slowed down just right, because it'll eat Wolf 55gr all day, but won't cycle the bottom of the barrel shit.
You should get a DD rear sight. It's cheaper, Dave runs one, and it's so light that it actually subtracts weight from your gun.
About optics: I think the Aimpoint Micro has several distinct advantages over the EOTechs, and by "several" I mean "two".
1. It, in a DD mount, is less than half the weight of even the lightest EOTechs.
2. If you have a Sig 556 like I do, it's slim enough that you can work the charging handle easier (and it's light, because the Sig 556 is heavy, sort of).
Otherwise, yeah EOTech all up in my bunghole! I'm a fanboi.
Hey, so "Build my AR" thread, I've got a problem. I've built an AR. It's amazing. It's run MilCopp just fine. It's beautiful, fast, and handy from 0-300 meters. It's everything I want and probably nothing I'll ever need.
So now what do I do?


JTNieman wrote:Do you also look down the barrel when you pull the trigger to make sure it's clear? It's best to visually confirm the chamber's empty this way.
SMoAF wrote:Your sin is one of geography, not one of unmanliness. Pimp's sin is that he's, well....himself.
Doctorr Fabulous wrote:If you're in a fixed defense with a Mosin, you failed somewhere.
TheLastOne wrote:Start selling your glocks and buying Sigs.



Regular Guy wrote:TheLastOne wrote:Start selling your glocks and buying Sigs.
BLASPHEMY!


Jeriah wrote:Hey, speaking of MOE pistol grips...
So since I got the MOE handguard in FDE on my new upper, I'm wondering if I ought to get matching a matching FDE pistol grip and buttstock on my lower, so it's all matchy-matchy. I've been using a standard A2 grip and an ACE M4 stock (2005 vintage), both in black. They work fine. I have giant monster hands and could easily handle a larger grip; the stock is fine but I'd like something in FDE so it matches and also so it doesn't get so hot in the sun.
I was about to ask some shit about buffer tube diameters and stuff, but fuck it, I'm just going to paint the old one with Kylon ultra-flat and see how it works out.
Might do the same with the pistol grip, but...does the MOE grip offer any real advantage? I can imagine it being more comfortable but I'm used to the A2, I always run it with gloves. Is this a case of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it," or more a case of "Dude, once you try MOE, you'll never go back"?


Regular Guy wrote:TheLastOne wrote:Start selling your glocks and buying Sigs.
BLASPHEMY!




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