I couldn't disagree with this more. You don't reduce carrier weight to just turn around and add it to the buffer. That's ridiculous. You reduce the weight of all the moving components to reduce the impact of the bolt and buffer reaching the end of travel, and you use the adjustable gas block to give you just enough gas to move those components and not a smidge more.
The only reason that all that mass is there is to reduce the rate of fire in a fully automatic firearm and make a firearm that is very tolerant of a wide variety of ammunition and environmental conditions. An M16 that ran 1200+ RPM would not be a terribly effective or useful firearm, nor would it be terribly tolerant of various conditions. However, in a lightweight/race gun, you don't care about any of that. You're not firing full auto (because firstly it's entirely useless in 90%+ of situations, and also not legal) and the firearm does not need to tolerate a wide variety of conditions, only the exact conditions that you are immediately facing. You run that gas block 1-2 settings above failure, and you get a firearm with no recoil, fast follow up shots, and absolutely no jump, drift or kick in any direction. The thing just stays put.
then you have the cost of a custom barrel over one on the shelf and a trip to the range every time the gas port is drilled larger. If you are doing it yourself, then its time, but a smith isnt going to do it for free and has to guarantee their work.Please explain how having a barrel made and asking them NOT to drill a gas port "takes a huge amount of R&D time that someone needs to pay for"...
If you have a drill press (even a cheap crap tire one will do) and a set of numbered drill bits (Princess Auto has cheap ones that will do the job) there is no excuse for not being able to do it yourself.
Where is this "huge amount of R&D time that someone needs to pay for" you speak of? All it takes is a bit of your own time to drill and test a few times. Am I missing something?
Seems some people just like overcomplicating things so they can flap their gums (or click their keyboard) just to hear themselves.
Canadian manufacturer, who do you suggest for a remington 30 ar build then? Since it was atrs that required me to give them specifications for them to build it and then declined when I said it was up to them to figure it out, do the testing and supply me with the finished product. If I have to do the engineering, design and testing, I may as well build it myself at that point.If the manufacturer or gunsmith you approach to do the job isn't competent enough to do it without requiring the customer to provide technical specifications or blueprints etc... then you need to find a different company to work with.
if it's simple and I am willing to pay, why is it impossible to find someone to do it?The lightweight carriers weren't designed or intended for use with the big bore cartridges. If you're trying to do something with a product that it wasn't meant to do then you should not expect an off the shelf barrel to perform properly. Having to get a custom barrel made and putting some time and effort into making it run the way you want it to should be expected. All you have to do is get the barrel made. You don't have to pay someone else to get it running.



























