Aniest
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Edmonton, Old Wholesale Sports
Q1) Is an ambidextrous ejection port important to you when buying a firearm?
Option 1: I only buy firearms that are capable of ejection on both sides
I have a preference for capable of both as this increases your possible sales.
Q2) Is an ambidextrous charging handle important?
Option 1: I only buy firearms that are capable of ambi charging
I have a preference for a forward handle that allows me to keep my trigger hand on the firearm.
Q3) Do you prefer side charging handles or an AR15 style charging handle?
Option 1: I prefer side charging handles (Left or Right side of the firearm)
Side charging is a lot better: i prefer Tavor handle over AR handle.
Q4) Does "Take Down" matter? Do you care if you can separate the rifle easily to make it more compact?
We plan on developing a 1 second, tool-less twist lock release that separates the Barrel and hand guard together as one piece from the receiver Allowing super compact storage, and easy cleaning
Option 2: I wouldn't ever, or very rarely use that feature
In a handgun caliber it will either be in storage in one piece or in use: take down is useless when it is taken down in your pack and you need it.
Q5) Does weight matter to you?
Of course we want to make everything as lightweight as possible, but we want to know how much it matters to you.
Option 1: Yes, I want everything to be as lightweight as possible
In a handgun caliber it absolutely must be light: it has no requirement for mass to help with recoil.
Q6) Weight Savings - Would you pay slightly more to save more weight?
Option 1: Pay more for better lighter materials
In a handgun caliber, yes, absolutely.
Q7) What kind of barrel? We want to build the best rifle package at the most competitive price possible.
We feel that most companies uses cheap barrels. We want to use the best. If we can include a Carbon Fiber, SS barrel at NO ADDITIONAL COST to you, would you want that? Or prefer just regular steel, or SS?
Lifetime warranty on the barrel! and our Firearm!
Option 2: Slightly more expensive Stainless Steel - No Rust
For a hunting and survival rifle, no glare stainless or coated stainless is best.
Q8) What kind of forend / handguard?
Option 2: I only need a top and bottom rail
I prefer short 3" top and forward bottom rails for sights and bi-pod type accessories, but could have holes to match existing add-on type rails for the sides for those that use them.
Q9) Do you care if firearms are made in Canada?
Option 3: Yes! I support Canadian Business - If quality is there.
Quality out of the gate is what is needed and a fair price for that quality: I don't want to have another Canadian manufacturer have all their Gen 1 units be crap.
Q10) Price Point - What price do you think would be fair for an incredible Canadian made Non-Restricted firearm like this
Option 2: 1000-1300
I figure $1150 would be a good ballpark, then a few changes (extra rails installed, etc.) pushing it to $1250 max.
My opinion only: forward assist is, regardless of the fan bois, useless. This is not the Sandbox, this is not Vietnam: if you need a forward assist with a civilian rifle you fail. Forward assist was invented for when the buffer failed to slam the bolt home on a crappy military round, not for domestic civilian Federal/Remington/Winchester/commercial goodness. Please don't add crap that isn't needed. I have lost count of the cases of rounds through a Tavor and never once had a wish for a forward assist. I have never used a forward assist on an AR... well, other than one of the other Canadian Manufacturers (their name is anathema) and that was because it was an extremely low number Gen 1 piece of crap...
Option 1: I only buy firearms that are capable of ejection on both sides
I have a preference for capable of both as this increases your possible sales.
Q2) Is an ambidextrous charging handle important?
Option 1: I only buy firearms that are capable of ambi charging
I have a preference for a forward handle that allows me to keep my trigger hand on the firearm.
Q3) Do you prefer side charging handles or an AR15 style charging handle?
Option 1: I prefer side charging handles (Left or Right side of the firearm)
Side charging is a lot better: i prefer Tavor handle over AR handle.
Q4) Does "Take Down" matter? Do you care if you can separate the rifle easily to make it more compact?
We plan on developing a 1 second, tool-less twist lock release that separates the Barrel and hand guard together as one piece from the receiver Allowing super compact storage, and easy cleaning
Option 2: I wouldn't ever, or very rarely use that feature
In a handgun caliber it will either be in storage in one piece or in use: take down is useless when it is taken down in your pack and you need it.
Q5) Does weight matter to you?
Of course we want to make everything as lightweight as possible, but we want to know how much it matters to you.
Option 1: Yes, I want everything to be as lightweight as possible
In a handgun caliber it absolutely must be light: it has no requirement for mass to help with recoil.
Q6) Weight Savings - Would you pay slightly more to save more weight?
Option 1: Pay more for better lighter materials
In a handgun caliber, yes, absolutely.
Q7) What kind of barrel? We want to build the best rifle package at the most competitive price possible.
We feel that most companies uses cheap barrels. We want to use the best. If we can include a Carbon Fiber, SS barrel at NO ADDITIONAL COST to you, would you want that? Or prefer just regular steel, or SS?
Lifetime warranty on the barrel! and our Firearm!
Option 2: Slightly more expensive Stainless Steel - No Rust
For a hunting and survival rifle, no glare stainless or coated stainless is best.
Q8) What kind of forend / handguard?
Option 2: I only need a top and bottom rail
I prefer short 3" top and forward bottom rails for sights and bi-pod type accessories, but could have holes to match existing add-on type rails for the sides for those that use them.
Q9) Do you care if firearms are made in Canada?
Option 3: Yes! I support Canadian Business - If quality is there.
Quality out of the gate is what is needed and a fair price for that quality: I don't want to have another Canadian manufacturer have all their Gen 1 units be crap.
Q10) Price Point - What price do you think would be fair for an incredible Canadian made Non-Restricted firearm like this
Option 2: 1000-1300
I figure $1150 would be a good ballpark, then a few changes (extra rails installed, etc.) pushing it to $1250 max.
My opinion only: forward assist is, regardless of the fan bois, useless. This is not the Sandbox, this is not Vietnam: if you need a forward assist with a civilian rifle you fail. Forward assist was invented for when the buffer failed to slam the bolt home on a crappy military round, not for domestic civilian Federal/Remington/Winchester/commercial goodness. Please don't add crap that isn't needed. I have lost count of the cases of rounds through a Tavor and never once had a wish for a forward assist. I have never used a forward assist on an AR... well, other than one of the other Canadian Manufacturers (their name is anathema) and that was because it was an extremely low number Gen 1 piece of crap...
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