PGWDTI - .338 Lapua Semi Auto .......The DIREWOLF!!!!

Good to see Steve.

The semi auto AR308/AR10 has made bolt action 308/7.62 precision rifles obsolete for about 20 years now. Canada fielded them since 2004 and they shoot like high end tactical bolt guns. Leaving the bolt guns for the bigger calibers "sniping" which has stretched way out there.

For some reason there is still this myth that 1 moa is what owners of these rifles are striving for. In reality a good AR10/AR308 with appropriate barrel, trigger, optics and ammo is a .5 moa and often slightly less firearm. Again, they can compete with a good tactical bolt action rifle. Only better ergonomics, and semi auto.

A couple of questions...

1) Trigger? More importantly what type of lock time? This is huge with semi autos and often either not known or completely overlooked.
2) The barrel is IBI.. So 5R rifling? Also is that black nitriding or just cerekote? The current nitride process I believe is the way of the future for the more barrel burning calibres to have more appeal.

looking forward to the details.

By the way. I think it needs one of the helically fluted barrels to give it that PGW lineup look. I know the gas block makes it hard. But still...

The issue with semi-autos and accuracy is that even if the system is capable of being really precise, they are challenging to shoot because they exploit any weakness in the shooters fundamentals, more so then a bolt gun. And most people's fundamentals are bad to horrible.
 
The issue with semi-autos and accuracy is that even if the system is capable of being really precise, they are challenging to shoot because they exploit any weakness in the shooters fundamentals, more so then a bolt gun. And most people's fundamentals are bad to horrible.

Not so much the case these days. Trigger lock time was the main culprit.

The myth however kept going since the rifles that cracked these issues around 2004 or earlier with KAC, such as the SR25 and Armalite AR10 SASS were very expensive, fairly rare, expensive to shoot, not universally modular and in Canada they were restricted.

I do however agree with you to some point. I have even shot groups with a bolt where I wasn’t happy with a shot and it would have ruined the group using an AR10 yet it was still a good shot with the bolt. Lock time again. The current Giessele triggers for example offer one of the fastest lock times for a semi auto. It’s half what a regular AR308 trigger is. Still slower than a high end precision bolt but at a point now where it’s not much of an issue. The main thing is it’s not really an issue these days with most decent precision AR rifles. Previously you had to spend big and there were few options that addressed this. These days you only run into this problem if the company making your AR308 cheeped out/doesn’t know the issue and or you don’t know about it to address it.
 
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Thanks for the words of support guys!

When I would look at a semi auto rifle, I would always imagine how certain things would affect a bolt gun if they were handled the same way. The goal was to take what 'I' thought were problem areas, and work towards eliminating them, or greatly reducing their influence on shot repeatability.

The Timberwolf and Coyote for instance, have a C shaped cross section, and a very stiff bridge of steel connecting the front ring and rear ring. If you look at the cross section of a Remington 700, the right side action rail, is tiny. Barrels typically oscillate vertically, so an action weak vertically will flex and thus allow the overall whip of the barrel to have a higher amplitude. You can say that a 40X single shot action is more accurate than a 700 repeater because the action is a lot stiffer.....coupled with some extra bedding surface, which at the end of the day is stability. Solid bedding contributes to a consistent vibration pattern and shot to shot consistency. A Coyote repeater action is magnitudes stiffer than a 40X single shot.

There have been endless debates in the black rifle forum about accuracy of push pinned receiver sets. I used to have a Colt HBAR that I built with a DCM floater tube, Krieger heavy barrel and a Jewell trigger. Because the lower was a large pin, and my flat top was a small pin, I had to use an adaptor pin. By design of the adaptor, rotating it caused the large lobe to act like a cam and you could remove all the play by forcing the upper down into the lower. I didn't have an 'accu-wedge', but used a small square of wide rubber band dropped down into the rear pocket so I had to push the upper down to get the pin in. If I shot it without these preload steps, and just shot it loose, it's best groups were always worse than the worse groups when it was preloaded. Nobody can tell me that loosening off the action screws off a bolt action is going to have a positive effect on accuracy.

The upper of the Direwolf is bolted to the lower like a bolt action, there are locating bosses that centre everything up. Cleaning is achieved by removing one bolt from the buffer tube mount, and pulling the carrier out the rear. This buffer tube mount has lugs on it to locate it into the upper. By rear loading the carrier assembly, it allowed me to address one other issue seen in the AR10, but not an issue in the AR15. Carrier droop. On the AR10, the rear of the carrier is reduced in diameter to fit off the shelf AR15 buffer tubes. This leaves a fairly short set of contact rails on the carrier, with a lot of weight cantilevered out back. The buffer tube mount on the DW has a collar that fits into the large bore of the upper, and over the back end of the carrier, supporting it. While the AR10 is supported while in the buffer, it sits at rest and firing, at a droop. The massive bolt and carrier on the Direwolf operate with buttery smoothness. The bolt head itself is huge, really huge. There is a lot of shared design with the AR family in terms of operating principal, but areas beefed up for strength.

When I designed the Twolf, I increased lug contact 55% and shear area 210% over a Remington 700, which is available in .338 Lapua. The lug contact and shear area of the Direwolf is the same as a Timberwolf, over strong. After the CF adopted the Timberwolf, Colt Canada was tasked with a lot of testing of the system. Their goal was to determine risk to the shooter/spotter in a catastrophic failure. They started off with putting a projectile in the bore, 6" from the muzzle. This of course caused the barrel to burst, and the high speed video is interesting, it looks like an alligator flapping his jaws. The witness paper showed no debris hitting the operators. Next up they jammed a bullet into the throat and fired another round. The over pressure came back through the firing pin, extending it back to the point of spring coil bind and when it released, it broke the sear on the trigger. There was no lug setback or any other structural damage to the receiver. IIRC they repeated this test SEVEN times in order to fail the action, and they couldn't. They told us that those tests on a C7 would reduce it to a bunch of shrapnel and that they had never seen a rifle survive that test, let alone seven times. I believe the rifle was repaired and was used for additional testing. Is the Timberwolf strong, you bet your butt it is! Did the lug contact need to be 50% more or the shear area 210% more? No idea, I didn't have FEA ability at the time, just how much bigger can I make this without making it into a club. Since the lugs and barrel extension share Timberwolf like strength built into it, I have faith in holding such a hot round. The barrel extension and barrel nut are quite large, which was in order to increase barrel mounting rigidity.

Every other AR pattern rifle out there has the hand guard attached to the barrel nut, with the exception of the monolithic styles. Back in 2005, I made a prototype aluminum stock that used a short section to mount the action, and a piece of aluminum tubing bolted to it, that was easy. I learned a lot about solid modeling and ended up machining the Twolf stock out of a big chunk of billet, which exists the same way today. We can attach sections of rail to the side via holes, and it has various top rails to facilitate inline NV and thermal systems. This same NV 'top' is the one used on the US M40 system today, which everyone back then tried to copy but we won the USMC contract because they honoured our 'first' of design. Now, there are aluminum stocks everywhere and the common theme is Mlok which is open source. You can see in the CAD rendering that the lower extends forward, and the hand guard attaches to it. Nothing mounts to the barrel nut. What is unique is it is the lower receiver that mounts the tube, NOT the barrel nut. The barrel is 100% floated with the exception of the gas tube coming back. Through some magic there, and the desire to reduce accuracy harming vibration, there is a captive plastic bushing in the upper that eliminates metal to metal contact.

The .338 Lapua is no powder puff, it burns basically 4 times as much powder as .223, and a bit more than double a .308. There are substantial forces at play, all of them trying to rearrange the parts after each shot. Having mechanical shot to shot consistency is the goal which leads to having an accurate rifle. The Direwolf LOVES 300 grain Lapua Scenar factory ammo. I've shot a lot of groups that were down in the .5-.6" range. All of this with a MIL spec trigger from a LPC LOL....Because of the size of the bolt carrier, the bore centreline is a bit higher from the lower. Thus, getting a hammer to hit the pin with AR parts is a bit of a challenge. The prototypes were fine with this trigger, but production models will have a proper hammer and a decent trigger pull. My favorite trigger by far is the Trigger Tech, and don't be surprised if that is standard in a minor modified version. Other calibres will be explored, 300/338 Norma for sure. No desire to do a .300 Win Mag. The DW is massive, and putting .308 into it is kind of counter productive, there are existing platforms that are available. With that said, perhaps an upper/lower set with the true floated barrel system in .308 size would be fun to experiment with. We are currently working on a side cocker like an FAL style to get away from the handle bolted to the carrier. I'd also like to add a case deflector.
 
Great post - thanks for letting us "inside" the development theory, it's something shooters don't get to see and it really helps to understand both the product and the process that brought it about.

PS - I think I figured it out, I'd be bankrupt in 2 weekends/4 days with a semi auto 338 Lap
 
wow great write up PGW Steve.

Couple questions:

1) QR sling points? I know it’s big etc but some on the handguard and one on the stock along with possibility of one on like an AR at where the buffer tube castle nut goes?

2) Arca or other platform possibility for mounting to tripod or using s bipod closer in along that bottom ridge which goes along under the handguard?

3) folder? For transport.

4) available in white/black combo? Would look awesome.

5) barrel, gas block and gas tube look like combo I used a ways back for Stag. Mine were nitride. Are these ones?

6) helical fluting? Practically pgw trademarked..

Cool rifle. Looking forward to seeing it when it’s available.
 
wow great write up PGW Steve.

Couple questions:

1) QR sling points? I know it’s big etc but some on the handguard and one on the stock along with possibility of one on like an AR at where the buffer tube castle nut goes?

2) Arca or other platform possibility for mounting to tripod or using s bipod closer in along that bottom ridge which goes along under the handguard?

3) folder? For transport.

4) available in white/black combo? Would look awesome.

5) barrel, gas block and gas tube look like combo I used a ways back for Stag. Mine were nitride. Are these ones?

6) helical fluting? Practically pgw trademarked..

Cool rifle. Looking forward to seeing it when it’s available.

1) Yes absolutely, production models will have additional functionality such as sling points. The first prototype was very blocky and square, was for function testing in the white and was kind of crude as well as 6061. The second prototype was 'pretty', had round edges and was cerakoted FDE, also 6061. The next mule is 7075 and has an industrial anodizing that is a medium grey.

2) The angled extension of the lower could be drilled and tapped to add an ARCA rail there, I don't know if I'd machine one in place though.

3) Folder is a tough one, I know there are systems to fold AR buffer tubes, that would be a whole engineering project to keep the LOP and other functionality. The first test mules were primarily for function and accuracy testing of the concept.

4) Could be any colour cerakote the customer wanted.

5) The barrels on the test mules have been IBI and shoot excellent. They are stainless steel, which doesn't take nitriding very well. Years ago we had some 416 receivers nitrided and they develop surface cracks and checking. Chromemoly 4140 takes nitride very well. The gas tube is an off the shelf +2 and the gas block was made in house. Production models will have materials and treatment optimized for life and performance. I know SS barrels are available with nitride now, perhaps treatment of 416 has been figured out, not like 15 years ago when we first tried. At the time our metal treatment place recommended against doing 416 but we had to try anyway.

6) The test mules have used helical fluted barrels, the pic in the first post is a 3D rendering. The barrels are Timberwolf barrels that have had a gas journal turned on them and the cone breech flattened. It uses the same massive thread of the Twolf barrel so the strength is there to support the weight and control whip.

There won't be any presales on these, and given the potential reclassification of semi autos, time will tell as to the availability in Canada.
 
Regarding price, we've only made a few prototypes to test the proof of concept, and get the patent stuff filed. Working on 2-3 pieces at the time is horribly inefficient, and basing price on that is near impossible. We'd like to stay competitive with other similar rifles, and it will take a small production run of 25 units or so to hammer down the costs involved. Currently, the magazine body is cut on a wire EDM and it takes 5 hours or so, thus a prototype magazine is close over $600 to make with the bottom, follower and other associated work. Wire EDM is great for making small runs and samples of items to be later mass produced out of extrusions, or injection molding. We have someone looking at the magazine now.

While we can use some AR family parts, we have to make the carrier, bolt head, firing pin, gas block and can't take advantage of the many MIL spec parts available.
 
Really enjoyed the detailed read and insight. Thank you for taking the time to write it up and share!
If I ever win the Lotto.....!

You're welcome! And thank you to the others that have offered positive words and support! Ross and I have been manufacturing rifles from bar stock since 1997 when we produced a 5 pound 3 ounce .300 Weatherby!!! Ross is a Colorado School of Trades gunsmith, and I'm just a millwright that learned how to run manual then CNC equipment along the way. We are a company of hunters, plinkers, competitors and collectors that all take a first hand interest in building great stuff. We have an amazing team of machinists and technicians and they take pride in what we do. We've done nothing but build rifles for 22 years, and have supplied close to ten thousand rifles to military and police all over the planet. We're excited to bring some out of the box thinking to a classic design. While the AR15 platform is a great infantry rifle, scaling it up and putting a massive round in it doesn't make it a great sniper rifle. Short comings were changed to make it one, and it is shown here as the DIREWOLF!
 
Really enjoying this thread. Great info. I will be following this project.

On a side note. I like the name. Fits in well with the product line naming convention as well.


Originally made a smart comment about volunteering for beta testing this rifle. Then I remembered it's 338 LM. Ammo costs for testing would be brutal. Fun but brutal.
 
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Thank you. I was having trouble sleeping one night and this came about.

No it doesn't have push pins and yes you need to take screws out to strip it. It's not big task to clean, but it is a specialized rifle for properly trained people. Sacrifices had to be made to keep the accuracy in it. The .338 Lapua is a big, brutal round and to tame it in an autoloader isn't for the faint of heart. The rewards and capability far outweigh the trade offs, and those that feel that this is the ticket for a particular job will not worry about that. Mow down a bunch of distant steel with it while delivering 1500 foot pounds on target waaaaay out there and you will see what I mean.

What does it weigh? Interested in purchasing if NR status is achieved
 
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