What we have here is an idea in the making!
The acr stock would be awesome on this rifle
If someone has the stocks to loan me to measure up, I could probably make something happen.
What we have here is an idea in the making!
The acr stock would be awesome on this rifle
Because the OP put an actual scope on the gun, whereas the APC was originally designed as a police carbine with something like an Aimpoint Micro on a low mount.
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No. I read your entire post. It is heavier, has a terrible stock and trigger. You stated accuracy slightly better than the ACR. What barrel do you have in the ACR?? Did you use same scope for both rifles?
Personally, I think that a snap-on plastic riser for the standard buttstock (akin to.the SAN version) would resolve the comb-height issue for most users. This would provide the necessary flexibility to add magnified optics should one desire. The fixed LOP is probably fine for the majority of users, especially since most are casual shooters and won't be running armour.
From what I've been able to ascertain since receiving the "enhanced" adjustable buttstock from Wolverine yesterday, it may not address the comb-height issue, nor the short LOP for large-statured owners. Overall the stock is quite a disappointment; it is very heavy and "clunky" for what it is and does. The snap-on riser is quite low and only raises the comb 1/2". More height would be preferable, say 1" total to accommodate a variable-magnification optic. The LOP is likely no longer than the basic buttstock. I say likely because I don't yet have a rifle with a basic stock to compare it to. That will change early next week, but what I can tell you now is that fully extended, the adjustable stock is no longer than a G36K buttstock that I happen to have lying around. Furthermore, the LOP only adjusts by 1 1/2" total. You read that right - there are only 2 adjustment stops of 3/4" each that the enhanced stock slides in or out. It is so little as to be practically irrelevant - nothing like the length of adjustment on an AR stock. All things considered (weight, limited adjustment), I can no longer justify $500 for an optional buttstock that doesn't fully address the issues associated with the basic stock. Unfortunately, it will have to go back to Wolverine. If B&T come up with taller riser options and a system for lengthening the extended LOP, then maybe I would reconsider. Sorry, no pics right now was I am reroute to Calgary for the gun show.
For now it is back to the drawing board. Until someone comes up with a snap-on riser I reckon I can either be content with a low-mount T1 as envisioned by B&T, or I can get creative. Options range from a strap-on padded cheekrest to something more permanent. I'm thinking a couple of holes through the top of the stock, then use screws from underneath to attach a riser fabricated from hard rubber, carved wood, or whatever. The simpler the better....
Anyhow those are my current thoughts regarding the APC223 buttstock issue. I can't recommend the adjustable buttstock in its current iteration, which leaves us with a home-grown solution until such time as B&T see fit to produce a snap-on plastic cheek riser for the standard stock. For the sake of a couple of small holes through the top strut of the stock, I'm not going to wait around. Wile E. Coyote School of Gunsmithing, here I come! Just as soon as I get my carbine, put together the MDT ESS precision rifle chassis that arrived today, take out the garbage and otherwise " clear the bench" for another new project....
well yah, but hard to do groups with my t2
people were like bro we want to see groups, so groups are what I went on a quest for
cant do groups without a scope
but yes the t2 is going back on this rifle till we fix the stock issue
Well if a $4k rifle doesn't shoot 1moa or better I'd be floored.
Well if a $4k rifle doesn't shoot 1moa or better I'd be floored.
But that picture of the unfinished bolt face made rounds on the internet. In fact some people thought it's a Norinco!
Blanchard grinding is not an unfinished surface, and can be as flat and accurately machined as precision machined surfaces, if not more so depending on how it's finished.
It's akin to jeweling on a bolt body. That's not an unfinished or rough surface.
I think the point of expecting a certain accuracy potential for x amount of dollars is the fact where the firearms industry is in this day and age of manufacturing.
Good barrels, and I mean exceptionally good barrels capable of very good mechanical accuracy on a service rifle that were being mass produced used to be the exception and not the norm. With quality barrels installed in rifles such as LMT, Colt Canada, H&K, Swiss Arms, etc., the bar has been raised considerably.
When you combine that with advances in ammunition - from reducing tolerances and inconsistancies with bullet manufacturing, powders, primers, brass, etc. There really is no good reason for a rifle to come new from a factory that meets a bare minimum serviceability accuracy threshold.
I understand why a military would set that bar quite low - the guns in training are beat to sh!t, ran with blanks, over cleaned, used for field training and drilled with to such extent that isn't conducive to retaining the accuracy potential it had or could have from purely using it to shoot with.
ok yes, but the accuracy is quite good on this rifle, way better than minimum serviceability, and better than my swiss! 1.366 inches at 100 meters, that means 1.23moa