Did you ever actually use your forward assist? - How'd that go?

I've used mine a few times in competition. (IPSC Rifle and 3-Gun)

Way faster than pulling the charging handle and throwing a live round on the ground.
 
I'm sure there were more than a few American GIs that would have loved to have that feature on the early M16 series of rifles used in the mud and crap of the South East Asian jungle action they were involved in.

Maybe not needed now so much as pretty much all the bugs have been worked out of the AR-15 operating system and it's evolved over several wars into a solid reliable platform used by many first rate troops but still.... S*** happens!!
 
Forward assist is the most useless thing ever. In fact, I've gone out of my way to source uppers without the useless "feature".

However, I will note that a pure slickside isn't much fun to stand beside because cases come backward at about 45 degrees. If going without the forward assist, get an upper that does have the shell deflector.

your opinion is noted, and is wrong.
 
I actually don't know how to respond to this.
My analogy refers to some peoples fortune to have something that never gives them any issues while other peoples experience's being totally different. The tow truck is there in times of trouble.
Just because you think it is irrelevant doesn't mean it is, or have never had to use it, or maybe you always have the time to patiently look and fiddle with your firearm. Not all people have time or circumstance to do it that way. I imagine in the hundreds of thousands of firearms that have a forward assist they might of needed a forward assist just once. Hell the Canadian military used a large FA to be used with gloves in cold weather. There's an awful lot of engineering and money spent on something so futile and obsolete.
Next time you press check a dirty firearm and it doesn't go into battery or you ride the charging handle by accident because of the shooting position your in or you have dirty ammo, a dirty chamber, or it's cold and hitting the FA quickly fixes that problem and you can get back to doing what you were doing why not have it? I know you can just tap, rack but why discharge good ammo if you don't need to.
Or maybe you can just put your hand up and ask for a time out so you can go to your corner, dis-assemble you firearm, clean it, replace the ammo and really figure things out while everyone around you keeps having fun.
The original Stoner design was an AR10 that was scaled down to an Ar15 and was designed by an engineer. As everyone knows you can design anything but how it works in real life is sometimes different.

What I think he's trying to say is that removing the questionable cartrdige/obstruction is akin to towing your vehicle. Much like forcing your broken vehicle to start(or drive for the sake of comparison) is akin to forcing a questionable cartridge or unknown debris into the chamber.

I use the forward assist all the time in 3 gun. I dont get why people bash it so much. Its a must have feature for any gun that doesnt have a reciprocating charging handle IMO.

The bolt not closing into full battery after someone doing a quick round check is something i see all the time.

Theres only really 3 options at that point...

1) slowy and carefully pull action back far enough for it to have enough potential energy to spring back fully into battery.

2) Just rack the action vigorously again ejecting out a loaded round.

3) The most common sense solution being to press the forward assist button thus giving the bolt the extra nudge needed to go into full battery!

There's another option. Stop doing press checks, they're pointless. If you insert your magazine with a tap and a tug, then I'm confident it is seated. I'm also confident that the engineers that designed the magazines and rifle have done their homework and both will function properly. If you insist on doing a press check then confirm a chambered round by looking at the position of the top round of the magazine prior to loading. Chamber a round, remove magazine and confirm the top round position has shifted to the other side. Re insert magazine(tap and tug) and move along. No need to risk inducing an OOB stoppage by playing with the charge handle. Confirm the magazine is inserted is almost zero risk.

Press checks are an administrative task, meaning they aren't done under stress or time constraints. Think this through... If press checks were so vital, then why does no one do it between each round fired? Why do you never see anyone at a match(or firefight) execute a reload, do a press check, then continue firing??? Do you trust the design of the rifle and magazine only when firing but not when doing an admin reload? That doesn't make sense.

Civilian side there's probably not much need for it.
Military side I've had my bolt carrier so carboned up that I needed to hit the forward assist to seat the bcg properly. It happens.

Lubrication, lots of it. The carbon fouling is creating drag, eliminate that drag by keeping it well lubed.

2x However, this was only with blanks. I've never had to blow through 5,000 rounds of ball in an half day though... probably for the best on that one.

Not trying to be a jerk, but who cares what happens with blanks, it's neither relevant for MIL folks or civilians.

I've used mine a few times in competition. (IPSC Rifle and 3-Gun)

Way faster than pulling the charging handle and throwing a live round on the ground.

Not sure what you mean? If you're referring to tossing a round by way of an immediate action drill(tap tug rack) then call it cheap insurance that could be solving any one of 4 possible causes of the stoppage. Forcing the bolt into battery without knowing what is causing the issue is a bad idea. There's also the issue of giving up fire control. Besides that, if the FA doesn't solve the problem, you're going back to the charge handle anyway. The FA COULD be faster, if it solves the problem. If the FA doesn't solve the problem then it was a waste of time and effort, and could result in a much more serious stoppage.

your opinion is noted, and is wrong.

There isn't anyone I know of that teaches the use of the forward assist for anything. Again not trying to be a jerk, but what the CF teaches or the US Army is not a glowing example of best practice. Much of what is taught is simply institutional imbreeding and hand me down dogma.
 
What I think he's trying to say is that removing the questionable cartrdige/obstruction is akin to towing your vehicle. Much like forcing your broken vehicle to start(or drive for the sake of comparison) is akin to forcing a questionable cartridge or unknown debris into the chamber.



There's another option. Stop doing press checks, they're pointless. If you insert your magazine with a tap and a tug, then I'm confident it is seated. I'm also confident that the engineers that designed the magazines and rifle have done their homework and both will function properly. If you insist on doing a press check then confirm a chambered round by looking at the position of the top round of the magazine prior to loading. Chamber a round, remove magazine and confirm the top round position has shifted to the other side. Re insert magazine(tap and tug) and move along. No need to risk inducing an OOB stoppage by playing with the charge handle. Confirm the magazine is inserted is almost zero risk.

Press checks are an administrative task, meaning they aren't done under stress or time constraints. Think this through... If press checks were so vital, then why does no one do it between each round fired? Why do you never see anyone at a match(or firefight) execute a reload, do a press check, then continue firing??? Do you trust the design of the rifle and magazine only when firing but not when doing an admin reload? That doesn't make sense.



Lubrication, lots of it. The carbon fouling is creating drag, eliminate that drag by keeping it well lubed.



Not trying to be a jerk, but who cares what happens with blanks, it's neither relevant for MIL folks or civilians.



Not sure what you mean? If you're referring to tossing a round by way of an immediate action drill(tap tug rack) then call it cheap insurance that could be solving any one of 4 possible causes of the stoppage. Forcing the bolt into battery without knowing what is causing the issue is a bad idea. There's also the issue of giving up fire control. Besides that, if the FA doesn't solve the problem, you're going back to the charge handle anyway. The FA COULD be faster, if it solves the problem. If the FA doesn't solve the problem then it was a waste of time and effort, and could result in a much more serious stoppage.



There isn't anyone I know of that teaches the use of the forward assist for anything. Again not trying to be a jerk, but what the CF teaches or the US Army is not a glowing example of best practice. Much of what is taught is simply institutional imbreeding and hand me down dogma.

Lol u obviously dont participate in 3 gun much Laugh2

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Punching the bolt into battery with manual force is not tantamount to creating an issue, or making an existing issue any worse.

Although it stubbornly persists as doctrine in the CAF manual of arms, there are instances outside of the press check that this function is useful. Silent bolt closure has been mentioned, and (as dubious as its utility seems) this provision is common amongst a few military rifles and not just the AR15 (ie: the button on the tip of NZDF's Steyr charging handles). In extreme cold weather conditions, firing a rifle creates a dramatic temperature variance between the bolt face and barrel extension, from which condensation and subsequent freezing will result. If this effect can be overcome by pressing the bolt home its final mm of travel, it's worthwhile.

I concede that operating the forward assist should be in response to a situation, rather than a drill to be carried out mindlessly. To answer the OP's question, I have had to use it!
 
Why do you think that? I shoot lots of 3 gun.

#### DOES happen.
Press checks have saved people from shouldering the rifle and hearing click and racking in a new round
Not a lot. Say less then 5%, but when it saves you time on the clock it saves you time.
Ive seen it with rifles and pistols. (Original M&P was notorious for it)

As an RO I have seen countless shooter click on an empty chamber.

Not you? GREAT.
But it does happen.
 
I've had to use it. Basically a unique situation where the inside of the chamber was fine, but the inside of the recover had gotten a thin layer of dusk after locking open on a previous magazine - just enough where the bolt didn't quite have the velocity to totally push the top round out of the magazine and up the feed ramp into the chamber. After a normal IA failed, I could see that's where it was getting hung up and decided it was safe to just try the FA instead, which gave it the little extra shove it needed to get into battery. The DI system did it's work, loosened up the gunk, and the rifle then functioned as normal after a few rounds.

It's the only time I've ever really had to use it but it convinced me it has a place.
 
Why do you think that? I shoot lots of 3 gun.

Joka basically made my point.

You may think my point made no sense... but I fail to see how removing the mag after chambering a round, looking at the orientation of the top and then reinserting it on a closed bolt followed by tapping and tucking on it is less strenuous then checking the chamber and pushing the FA once with ur thumb.
 
Never.

But then again the forward assist only makes sense to crooked Army officials and people who don't understand how the AR works.
 
Joka basically made my point.

You may think my point made no sense... but I fail to see how removing the mag after chambering a round, looking at the orientation of the top and then reinserting it on a closed bolt followed by tapping and tucking on it is less strenuous then checking the chamber and pushing the FA once with ur thumb.

Because it works in the light or in the dark. It can be verified with sight and in a tactile manner. It makes no difference whether the gun is hot or cold. And last but most importantly you are not screwing with the operating mechanism.
 
I will also add;

I have tapped a handgun slide into battery countless times in an IPSC match.
It's a pretty normal thing to do.

Not sure why anyone is offended that I do with my rifle too.
 
Really?! I personally disagree with your statement.
Maybe you just can't maintain your kit properly.

Nobody here has fired hundreds of rounds in the cold or hundreds in a row non stop. I have had a bolt stop almost half way forward from all the carbon in the rifle.
Former CF. Forward assist = good thing.
 
Lubrication, lots of it. The carbon fouling is creating drag, eliminate that drag by keeping it well lubed.

Not always an easy task when you're living in sand, dirt, sludge and pooh dust.

Or when you're in the arctic.


I'll take a forward assist over "just keep it lubed". YMMV.
 
User the forward assist on my issued rifle several times during both tours in Afghanistan...

That poo dust will get everywhere and cause all sorts of #### that will make the best maintained rifles jam in some weird way. Fall into a dirty wadi or freshly irrigated grape/poppy/pot field and you will need to use that forward assist at some point during the day if you find yourself on a two way range.

Press checks is what is being tought at all levels in the CAF, including the "pointy tip of the spear" guys

Just for fun... How many the "FA is useless" crowd does stuff like scanning&breathing after shooting at paper targets on a sunday morning and going back home to clean their AR for a longer amount of time than they spent shooting it ? :p

I'll keep my FA, because it has proved its utility in very rough time and I will also keep doing presschecks :p
 
Never.

But then again the forward assist only makes sense to crooked Army officials and people who don't understand how the AR works.

The forward assist was tested extensively prior to being accepted. Attached is a passage from 5.56 Timeline

"Retired Army Colonel E.B. Crossman files “Report of Investigation of M16 Rifle in Combat” with the Ichord Subcommittee. Comprised of 250 personal interviews with Army and Marine units in Vietnam, it reports that roughly 50 percent of the troops have experienced serious malfunctions with their XM16E1 rifle, of which 90 percent were failures to extract. The cause of these malfunctions was not determined. Other observations are that: 1) The bolt closure device is used frequently enough to justify the Army’s insistance upon this product improvement;...."

I used it a few time on my C7, oil does not always clear the fine crud out. When I used the C1 it had a heavier return spring and the bb would just slam forward. Only once I had enough crude in the breach, that the FN did not close. On the C7 being more small and a lighter spring it is needed at times.
 
What's the argument for not having one on a rifle?

Even if you seldom/never use it; Does it hinder the gun in any way?
 
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