shortandlong said:
are you talking cost or performance?
Cost per round...
BTW...
Hi Tom,
AIA is the Australian company that designed the rifle. Lithgow had no part in the design of the rifle. The rifles are made in Vietnam by the state's factory (the same factory that produces their military rifles). All proof testing is done by this factory. The rifles are very well made and finished.
As to whether it is worth the money this depends on what you want the rifle for. If you are a collector, no. If you are looking for a military style rifle for shooting; the ease of obtaining good quality cheap .308, the ability to mount a scope inexpensively make the No.4 Mk.IV a good option.
Regards,
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(Edited by request)
----- Original Message -----
From: Tom and Thanh
To: ############@###.com
Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2006 11:01 AM
Subject: re AIA M10 rifles
Hi, I'm in Canada. The AIA M10 .308 rifles are just being imported here for
the first time now.
http://www.lawranceordnance.com/new/rifle-m10.html
We are curious about their provenance. We hear Australia, we hear Vietnam.
I've heard that AIA is just one guy in Brisbane and there is nothing else in
Australia. They were possibly first developed at Lithgow but subsequently
moved offshore to Vietnam.
Who proof tests them and ensures their safety and quality? Specifically, is
it a plant in Vietnam that does everything?
How does the quality compare to the original military surplus rifles?
They are not cheap guns. Is one of them worth the extra money when you can
buy for example a collector grade Enfield cheaper?
Sincerely,
Tom