LuckyLuc82
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Rockwood, Ontario
Nice
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I will be very interested in your selection of optics for the Stag 10.
I am assuming you are having interesting problems to address. A solid optic for 200 yrs or more and a rock solid and potentially life-saving optic for close in work.
In addition to the BCL 102, I have an RA XCR L (5.56) and Tavor 21 in the same calibre.
On the XCR I have mounted a Burris FastFireII red dot onto a Burris E1 3-9x40 with Burris PEPPR QD mount.
Nice setup. Works reasonably well, but I am not sure I would want to bet my life with this setup.
The Tavor 21 has a Vortex Spitfire 3X Prism optic. This would likely be my goto setup for in encountering wolfs in close quarters.
The Tavor is just a rock-solid performer, never misses a beat, regardless of how dirty or hot it gets.
I can look over the Spitfire for really close in work and send effective rounds down range, and the optic tracks true and fast for mid-range work.
The 21 is limited game hunting due to the size of the 5.56. However, the Tavor 7, should it arrive in Canada and remain unrestricted would a rifle I would give careful consideration to.
Edit: I forgot to mention I installed the Geiselle Lightning trigger bow in the Tavor. Great upgrade that I highly recommend for any rapid fire requirements.
I do have a trust issue with direct impingement rifles though. I keep my BCL wet and clean, and it works really well as such.
However, just the design of the direct impingement and "crapping where you eat" always had me wondering if the entire design team was from Berkley and on acid when this was developed.
Sig just won a major US contract for their MCX (gas piston) suppressed systems. I have noted over the years that the special forces teams often opted out of the direct impingement options in favour for gas piston rifles.
I do ask tons of questions, and as such, I have learned and continue to learn a great deal from the member here.
So I am not judging just engaging in what I hope is productive dialogue, however, if my arse were on the line, a direct impingement rifle would not be one of my choices.
so hopefully that adventure doesn't repeat itself as I quest for an AR-10 .338 fed barrel.
I have purely personal reasons, from the past, that I don't want to elaborate on in the forums, that put me in the position that I'd rather not put a mcgowan barrel on my rifles. Like I say, personal reasons, nothing to do with a bad experience with an actual barrel. To date, I've never handled thier product.
I have purely personal reasons, from the past, that I don't want to elaborate on in the forums, that put me in the position that I'd rather not put a mcgowan barrel on my rifles. Like I say, personal reasons, nothing to do with a bad experience with an actual barrel. To date, I've never handled thier product.
Have you took delivery of the Stag 10 yet Thomas?
I am thinking of getting one and what is your thought about AR10 platform in wsm caliber?
I don't want to get into the debate over whether the AR-10 is an appropriate rifle for hunting, I've hunted with black rifles in the past and have gone back to a simple and light weight bolt action rather than haul around a heavier rifle just to have faster follow up shots. I've been lucky and never had a pack of anything dangerous come in on me while hunting so the fast follow up shots lost value to me. It's all a matter of personal preference and if you want to hunt with an AR-10 then go for it.
As for the Stag or BCL choice.
I'll never spend another dime on anything that says NEA or BCL on the side of it. They have been making firearms and firearms parts for a lot of years and they still can't seem to make 10 rifles the same. There are simply way too many reports of people having issues with their stuff to ever consider buying their stuff again.
I've owned Stag products before and found them to be well made and well finished, the Stag lower I had a few years ago also had one of the best factory triggers I've used. They also have a good warranty and I'm pretty sure I read that Arms East is taking care of the warranty issues so it should be no problem getting something fixed if needed and I trust them to take care of the customer a lot more than I trust BCL.
I do like ambi controls but I don't need them, the AR platform is actually ambidextrous from the factory, you just manipulate the controls a little differently. Do you think the guys in the military are issued a left hand gun if they put a check in the other box? No, you learn to be proficient with the platform and it's quite easy. I have a few left handed shooting buddies that have no issues with a standard AR.
I would trust your Burris stuff before I put my life behind Vortex, don't mean to crap on your stuff but Vortex don't have a great track record and three out of four of the Vortex Viper PST scopes I've owned have needed warranty service. Not a good failure rate and there are many more that will share similar stories.
Your direct impingement fears or mistrust or whatever you want to call it is unwarranted. You can easily run 1000 rounds of ammo through a DI rifle with no more than a drop of oil from time to time. DI is simply an internal piston rifle compared to external piston and unless you're running a huge amount of ammo through them in a short amount of time you really don't need to worry.
Piston AR's are a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. They do have some advantages over a DI rifle but they also have disadvantages and only the end user knows which attributes of each they need the most for their intended use.
Thousands of soldiers trust their lives to DI guns every day and just because some special forces teams use a piston version doesn't mean it's better, only that it has certain strengths that they require to fulfill their job. An external piston rifle can typically be fired full of water without catastrophic failure like a DI rifle but for the vast majority of shooters their rifle will never be submerged so it doesn't matter. Piston rifles bring with them increased cost and complexity as well as proprietary parts than can only be purchased from the manufacturer rather than just buying any milspec part to get your rifle running again in the even of a mechanical failure.
For a nice mid range scope for point blank to 300 yards I would go with something like a Sightron 1-7x24 or the Nikon M223 I got recently in a trade that is 1.5-6x24, there are plenty of other manufacturers that make similar stuff but again I would personally stay away from Vortex and even though everyone says the new Bushnell stuff is nice I've had some poor experiences with them and feel the best thing about them is the warranty (just like Vortex).
With a scope that starts at 1 or 1.5x you can clearly see targets within 10 feet and can zoom in to shoot fairly accurately out to 200-300 yards if needed. You're not going to be doing any target shooting with a low power optic like that but it's enough to make a clean shot on a deer, elk, or moose within 300 yards. Having a scope and a dot sight or a set of BUIS on a rifle seems silly to me, to much crap hanging off it, I like to keep my stuff clean and light and instead I'll spend the money and get an appropriate optic for the task at hand.
Give the guys at Tier One Armoury in Edmonton a call, They'll get you one and will ship it to you. Great guys with access to a lot of stuff.
a .338 federal barrel? or a mcgowan?
jerry at mystic precision and I already talked about the mcgowan route.
I'd like to try and support Maple Ridge Armory and am really hoping that my "money isn't an option Ryan" ..... comment in response to my correspondence was taken seriously haha
But ya, MRA is working on it I think and I don't mind waiting a few more weeks for a response.... but not much more. I will go for a full blown custom krieger barrel if I have to and they can offer a palma contour, short chambered in .338fed as a standard offering then I get an AR barrel made out of that...... $$$$
It will happen ..... just throw time and money at anything... it will eventually happen LOL
Have you took delivery of the Stag 10 yet Thomas?
I am thinking of getting one and what is your thought about AR10 platform in wsm caliber?
Just curious but why hunt with an AR10?
For close to the same price you can pick up a Sako Finlight II and not have any issues with the police and future regulations.
Very light, and very solid reputation for being very accurate, and you can get it any almost any calibre you like, including 30.06 and 7mm mag.
The resale is also very solid on this rifle, so if for whatever reason you want or need to sell it, you should get almost all of your money back.
The answer is "why not" ?
The answer is "why not" ?.
I am often a money is no object kind of guy who likes to make rifles the best they can be, I dont mind starting out with a lesser product, then spending more fixing and upgrading if it means in the end I have a better rifle.
I cant add a integrated ambi release to a stag set very easily but I can start with a BCL set, swap the upper and have atrs clean up and anodize for not a whole lot. A couple hundred extra on a $5k build is minimal.
Ambi bolt releases are not for everyone, but I used mine with my index finger on my MV and MH all the time. I find it to be extremly ergonomic, and enjoy it on the ACR, XCR, and APC. I agree its not needed, and for the money it may not be worth it to most, but I am not most.
If you are seriously considering a BCL build, which I would recommend against given the Stag option that now exists, I would highly recommend you have it type 3 hard coat anodized before you consider anything else. Cost $150 with stripping BCL’s extremely thick ceracoat application that hides a lot of cosmetic and not so cosmetic tooling machine marks.
The inside of my upper where the BCG rides resembled spiral fluting after it was stripped.
I only had approximately 500 rounds through my Gen 1 when the take down pin holes ovaled and i began to experience not just side to side wobble but significant movement up and down and back to front between the upper and lower.
Luckily the 65 lbs of torque their monkey used when tightening the barrel nut did not distort the threads on the upper.
I cannot tell you how pissed I am that BCL skipped the anodizing. Absolutely effing retarded in my not so humble opinion.
I have now had mine anodized and will be picking it up from ATRS and then will have to look at machining custom take down pins.
Pissed does not even begin to described how I feel about that.
Rant off!
You can get an ar-10 rifle decently light weight. Have a bcl that was under 7lbs and about 8lbs with a 1-8x. Working on a stag 10 that will be in the 6 lbs range with optic




























