XperienceDUDE
CGN Regular
- Location
- Eastern Canada
I might go with a supperlative arms piston kit on my build. Has anyone tried one so far ? Atrs said it should work.
Ah yes, it's Saturday.
Why do you want a piston system on a rifle designed to be DI?
What improvements do you expect so see?
A piston system, in my opinion is superior. Hence the reason majority of modern new rifles are piston. Secondly the new improvements companies are making with AR platforms with piston systems is awesome. HK, SIG,pws. Etc.
Why not
A piston system, in my opinion is superior. Hence the reason majority of modern new rifles are piston. Secondly the new improvements companies are making with AR platforms with piston systems is awesome. HK, SIG,pws. Etc.
Why do you want a piston system on a rifle designed to be DI?
What improvements do you expect so see?
A piston system, in my opinion is superior. Hence the reason majority of modern new rifles are piston. Secondly the new improvements companies are making with AR platforms with piston systems is awesome. HK, SIG,pws. Etc.
You do realize something like the Hk416(sorry as far as piston ARs go this is the only one I have any serious experience with) was developed extensively and utilizes a proprietary bcg. Comparing that to some conversion kit is deeply ignorant.
And its biggest advantage of something like the 416 is short barrelled and suppressed especially in full auto. From an ergonomic standpoint something like a 416 diverts a lot of gas away from your face compared to the di guns which makes it easier to shoot for extended duration. So on a 20 inch or 18.6 inch gun that will never see a suppressor you are gaining nothing but weight. And that isn't an opinion, it is a fact.
You want it to be different, cool, go nuts, but don't pretend it will give you anything a di gun will, because it won't and usually the conversion kits perform worse than the di guns or the dedicated piston designs like the 416 or a pws.
You do realize something like the Hk416(sorry as far as piston ARs go this is the only one I have any serious experience with) was developed extensively and utilizes a proprietary bcg. Comparing that to some conversion kit is deeply ignorant.
And its biggest advantage of something like the 416 is short barrelled and suppressed especially in full auto. From an ergonomic standpoint something like a 416 diverts a lot of gas away from your face compared to the di guns which makes it easier to shoot for extended duration. So on a 20 inch or 18.6 inch gun that will never see a suppressor you are gaining nothing but weight. And that isn't an opinion, it is a fact.
You want it to be different, cool, go nuts, but don't pretend it will give you anything a di gun will, because it won't and usually the conversion kits perform worse than the di guns or the dedicated piston designs like the 416 or a pws.
Is it just me or is one of you guys screwing up the reply with quote?
I'm not sure who I'm replying to anymore.
I think I fixed it in my reply
Anyway, OP.
If you want a piston kit on your rifle go for it. I'm just not sure what gains you expect to see after spending the money and think a training course or a 1000 rounds of ammo would go further towards seeing improvements on target downrange.
I never compared your precious HK to a conversion. That rifle was reengineering by HK to be a piston operated rifle.
It still offers nothing over a DI rifle other than bragging rights to a Canadian shooter.
Heavier, more expensive, harder to source parts.
HK makes fantastic rifles but unless your military or law enforcement and using it where people are shooting back at you I see no justification to spend that much money unless you just have lots of cash and want one.
I'm in no way saying there's anything wrong with the HK or that they aren't a better product, only that as a civilian shooter in Canada there is no advantage to shooting one over any other quality rifle.
Lmao, he was responding to me. Not you my friend. He was trying to put words in my mouth. He was making an assumption I was comparing a "piston kit" to an actual piston gun as being equal. I'm still trying to figure out how he came to that conclusion. Because no where in my comment did I mention piston kits.
Alright i get what you guys are saying. It was mostly to have an nr ar that stays clean. And i always wanted a piston ar so i tought why not a MS ! But ill probably stick woth DI and my tin coated lighted bcg from brownells
I was not responding to you. The weight is a detriment however the mr is price competitive if you use the features you utilize.
Don't let anyone talk you out of it if that's what you want, it's your rifle and your money.
If you're running a light BCG I hope you have an adjustable gas block, the system needs to remain balanced. If you remove mass from the moving parts you need to reduce the gas or it will push the carrier back harder making it slam into the back of the buffer tube harder than before which counters the point of a light BCG.
I agree that you get what you pay for, I don't think the HK is overpriced, it's just a lot of money for features that are useless to the average Canadian sports shooter.
Like buying a Ferrari to go get groceries at Safeway and never taking it on a track to actually drive it how it's meant to be driven.
Alright i get what you guys are saying. It was mostly to have an nr ar that stays clean. And i always wanted a piston ar so i tought why not a MS ! But ill probably stick woth DI and my tin coated lighted bcg from brownells



























