You do realize other guns besides ARs exist and can even be chambered in different calibers?
You posted while I was reading the thread/replying so I didn't see yours till after mine went up. I was responding to rally guy who was waxing melancholy about ARs being restricted.are you talking to me?
if not, do quote your reply
You posted while I was reading the thread/replying so I didn't see yours till after mine went up. I was responding to rally guy who was waxing melancholy about ARs being restricted.
This would be an interesting cartridge in a short action bolt gun. Even unsuppressed it would make a curious "whisper" load.
A friend sent this to me. I think I am in love. :yes
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If you like big projectiles, you’ll love the .416 Hush Puppy round by AM-TAC Precision. I had the chance to talk with Damon, the designer of the cartridge.
GREAT GOOGLY MOOGLY. My dorm room was smaller than these projos!
The .416 Hush Puppy is based on a .50 Action Express cartridge and fits a 450 grain Hornady .416 bullet. The round is meant to be fired suppressed, and according to Damon has an extremely flat trajectory.
AM-TAC will sell a barreled AR upper in a 10.5″, 14.5″ (pinned to 16″) and 16″ barrel length. The upper uses a 7.62×39 BCG that is made out of a durable stainless steel instead of the usual carpenter steel entry-level AR bolts are made out of.
Damon told me to only use USGI mags, which are inexpensive and plentiful, due to the lack of a rib found in other AR mags such as those made by Magpul. A 30-round 5.56 mag will hold 10 .416 rounds, and a 20-round AR mag will hold 7 .416 rounds.
.. So that means we only get 2/3 rounds out of our 5 & 10 round magz...!?
The only thing that interests me there is "how quiet can you get it WITHOUT a suppressor?"
AM-TAC will sell a barreled AR upper in a 10.5″, 14.5″ (pinned to 16″) and 16″ barrel length. The upper uses a 7.62×39 BCG that is made out of a durable stainless steel instead of the usual carpenter steel entry-level AR bolts are made out of.
Carpenter is a steel manufacturer and not a type of steel.
158 Carpenter is a specification set out in the TDP for mil-spec bolts.
158 Carpenter is not used only on entry level bolts so I don't know if you were fed this horse crap or if you came up with it yourself.
Stainless steel is relatively soft but can be hardened by heat treatment however the carbon content in 158 carpenter is one of the reasons that it is suitable for the manufacture of bolts.
Here you can see the total specification package of 158 Carpenter.
http://cartech.ides.com/datasheet.aspx?i=101&E=100
Thanks, makes more sense now.Just to be clear, I didn't come up with anything. All I did was cut and past from another article.



























