blaxsun
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
You need a Blue Force Gear Vickers sling. Everyone here will tell you so![]()
Absolutely! This single addition turns your Norinco into a Tier-1 AR!
You need a Blue Force Gear Vickers sling. Everyone here will tell you so![]()
those are DEALERS providing warranties, like marstar does with norinco,
one shot wont support your KA if you go through someone else, or lack paper work,
just like marstar wont warranty the norinco you buy from one shot... or sfrc ect...
What I do find a little useless about these threads is the minimal amount of ACTUAL DATA that gets related.
I would absolutely support anyone who said, "the problem with NEA rifles is that the ABC is spec'd to ### instead of YYY, and consequently a lot of issue ZZZ is likely". I would also accept "NEA was involved in really questionable advertising stuff here on CGN, and I just won't support them for that, regardless of the fact that I couldn't tell you much about their rifles". Either way, I would be inclined to say "fair enough". Both would be legitimate complaints, and I don't object to anyone exercising their discretion in regards to standards for ARs, or ethics.
Unfortunately I often see - in addition to the occasional legitimate complaint - random comments like "NEA guns are garbage" from people with no experience with the guns, OR specific complaints about what is wrong.
Originally Posted by easysauce
the fact that the same people constantly derailing threads and Pro NEA people dont seem to get butt hurt enough to report it... yet the ANti crowd acts like the world will end if another NEA is sold...
news flash... a product that is being sold faster then its being made is a good product.
Hard to argue with that logic.Save your money and buy quality once.
We don't provide warranty work. We send it back to KAC. If we don't have the export paperwork, we can't send it back. Simple.
If you buy KAC from Calgary Shooting Centre, we will look after you if you need warranty work, as they are an authorized dealer.
If we sold Norcs the distributor would provide or facilitate the warranty work depending on what their agreement is.
Just like Glocks, which is one of the firearms we don't go direct for. If there is a problem we contact our distributor and they look after it.
one shot does good work and I hear good things, im not bashing your warranty, just pointing out that its not some blanket manufacturer supported thing... IE buy this manufacturers brand, get this warranty,
Sorry, I was going to leave but I have to ask... is there no such thing as authorized warranty repair centers in the firearms world?
Personally, at this point in time I would question this approach to NEA, why, because I don’t believe the problems we have seen in the past are representative to the current production.
For instance (as an example, a small complaint of mine that is almost irrelevant)… if I said the lower parts are a poor fit on an NEA, ie: the safety selector leaves track marks on the receiver and is rather loose… I would feel that is wrong because I would like to believe that the current production doesn’t use the same LPKs as the early guns. On the other hand, I don’t believe their ARs have suddenly gone up to KAC quality… so…
Where does this leave me, not wanting to use the older production as an example and not wanting to say, without seeing or hearing of such, it is better quality than what we have seen in the past?
All I can do is caution that the NEA may not be of the quality the OP is looking for…
easysauce, taking things personally? Opinions differ, this is my opinion, get over it...
That's because ITAR applies. We can't ship illegally (or grey market without paperwork) imported products back across the border.
If you purchase any product through an authorized dealer and follow the step correctly, the warranty applies. You buy a Rolex from the guy in the trench coat on the corner...............
There are and a few importers/distributors who have a gunsmith in house or contract it out, so they can provide warranty work in house.
We can't afford to keep a gunsmith employed with KAC, Ithaca or DD warranty work![]()
As I meantioned in another thread, I actually love these threads. Every time one pops up I sell a bunch more NEA'sA 1/2 dozen more people either had a new 12.5" gun arrive last week or one arriving this week so I'm sure there will be alot more reviews on them.
Ryan
Sigh, I was actually going to post this type of a question and someone beat me to it. After reading all this, I'm still on the fence. I'm looking for a 10.5" setup and currently debating on the NEA or the DDMK18.
Maybe you should become an NEA warranty center, thats gotta be 60 to 80 hours per week for a gunsmith.![]()
As I meantioned in another thread, I actually love these threads. Every time one pops up I sell a bunch more NEA's![]()
Sigh, I was actually going to post this type of a question and someone beat me to it. After reading all this, I'm still on the fence. I'm looking for a 10.5" setup and currently debating on the NEA or the DDMK18.
And thats the thing, isn't it. You can never tell what you will get from NEA. Will it be a gun that works and looks presentable or is it a gun that looks like crap, and doesn't work. That kind of inconsistent delivery comes from just one thing; guys that don't care what goes out the door. Once you pay, they have you, you have no choice but to wait for them to fix it. If NEA wants to be taken seriously as a manufacturer after all the BS they have pulled they need a 100% money back guarantee, if the rifle is unsatisfactory for any reason for the first 30 days then NEA refunds your money. When they have to start paying for their screwups with cash money, there will be a marked increase in how much they care what goes out the door.
There's a difference between having and needing a warranty. Some manufacturers are known for producing more lemons than others... And by the same token, some manufacturers warranties will suck more than others.
No offense, but why do you think that is? Might it at all have something to do with the continual "glowing endorsements" - despite the fact that every month we're seeing at least one additional flawed example that's experienced another "fixed" QC issue? It speaks volumes that Norinco probably outsells all other ARs by probably a factor of 2:1 or greater, and yet we never seem to hear of similar problems plaguing it. For that matter, none of the other AR manufacturers have even remotely experienced the myriad of problems associated with NEA.
What is rarely taken into consideration is that a lot of the people that shoot NEAs are experienced AR owners, who can probably troubleshoot (and resolve) the majority of any minor issues. Not only that, but I highly doubt that the NEA is their sole AR. In fact, I suspect they probably have a few.
I think the real question that's not being asked is: If you could only have one AR15, would it be an NEA?
When NEA pays for a warranty issue to be shipped back to them, pays someone to work on it, pays for the parts, and then pays to ship it back to the customer you don't think this costs them "cash money"???? What do you think they pay with, Monopoly money?
Now in answer to Blaxsun's last question in bold. No it wouldn't. But thank baby Jesus I don't have to choose! Cause I guarentee that the answer would surprise most of the guys on this forum!
I'm curious about that answer too.Appreciate the well thought-out reply, thanks. So out of curiosity (and so you don't continue to keep us in suspense), which would be the one you'd keep?
I thought labour rates and components were pretty cheap in China, no?
(kidding, kidding!)



























