That sounds like the aluminum spec is questionable, since it appears to be too soft?
Perhaps a softer grade is being used as the stock would be both cheaper and easier to machine.
That sounds like the aluminum spec is questionable, since it appears to be too soft?
We need a thank you button .... Great infoThere are 2 operating systems to run the bolt back to cycle the action.
Gas impingment which is what the ARs were designed with originally and works and the newer piston system that allows the gun to supposedly run cleaner and cooler.
DGI employs a gas tube that runs back to the bolt carrier and literally blows the bolt back with gas from the burning gun powder. The piston systems use gas collected at the gas port to mechanically drive a rod (piston) back to the bolt carrier to operate the rifles action.
Piston systems are all proprietary so parts from 1 maker are not operational with parts from another unlike the Direct Gas Impingement systems are.
Piston systems are well known for carrier tilt, excelerated wear on the upper and buffer tube.
Personally I would not have a piston driven AR, at least until the parts are more universal and some of the issues are sorted out. There seems to be a trend to fix things that are simple and not broken these days, all at the consumers expense.
The Bushmaster rifles are decent, they like DPMS are part of the Remington group which is part of a larger comglomerate, so in all a decent mas produced rifle that like all ARs have unlimited upgradeability.
I prefer our own AT15 rifles for overall quality but have an old XM15 Bushmaster that I won't sell simply because it runs flawlessly and is very accurate.
I have three AR's (two AR-15's and an AR-10) with DI and a STAG piston driven. The STAG has excellent workmanship, a fantastic upper to lower fit, you cannot see daylight between them yet the rear pin can be pushed and the two separated just by finger pressure alone. The chamber is Wylde to allow either .223 rem or 5.56 NATO ammo. Another impressive aspect is the trigger pull. Now, factory AR-15's come with trigger pulls ranging from the atrocious to plain sucking but the STAG came with a trigger almost as good as a Geissele on one of my other AR-15's. A buddy of mine, captain in the Virginia State Police and SWAT member, talked me into buying a STAG. He claims their testing, together with FBI weapons experts at Quantico, rate STAG quality up there with LMT, KAC and Colt. In fact, apparently STAG makes most of Colt's parts.I'm interested that you included Stag in that group...I have generally thought of Stag as the top end of the middle tier. I would be interested to hear any further information you'd like to give on Stag.
I guess the bottom line is what one wants the AR-15 for and how much one is willing to pay for it. I don't have much access to 5.56 NATO ammo so for me a .223 Rem chamber is fine, however, my experience with the Wylde chamber has been very positive with .223 Rem match ammo so I don't see any negatives. When one deals with top of the line AR-15's, differences between them become more subjective rather than objective. Frankly, for the use we put our AR-15's as civilian gun nutz how does the quality of an LMT, for example, manifest itself over an Armalite? My AR-10A4, with free floating barrel, is very accurate with match ammo and has not malfunctioned on me after 2500 rounds or more with minimal cleaning. The LMT, as an example, is considered the rifle to go gaga over, but I could not justify the huge price difference from my AR-10A4 based on my experience and needs. IMHO, the Stag is perhaps the optimal balance of quality and price.It's definitely interesting to hear...I am just often specifically interested to hear what KevinB will say about stuff because of his unique perspective as both a pointy-tip-of-the-spear user and as an employee of one of the two or three absolute top-shelf-bar-none builders.
It's one thing to hear "Stags are solid guns" from a guy who shoots a few thousand rounds a year...that describes most of my friends and probably me as well. But if I notice the horse's mouth moving I like to lean in for any information I can get.
Wicked_Police, I noticed a year or two ago, was pretty hot on Stags as well...that is another guy I find useful to pay attention to.
But then a lot of heavy, legit guys from M4C, for example, really bag on them. Stuff like the wylde chamber is ordinarily a big red flag for me. They generally get lumped in with Bushmasters and Armalites. So when I see KevinB put them on his "approved" list I get really interested and want to pry out any extra information I can get.
But then a lot of heavy, legit guys from M4C, for example, really bag on them. Stuff like the wylde chamber is ordinarily a big red flag for me. They generally get lumped in with Bushmasters and Armalites. So when I see KevinB put them on his "approved" list I get really interested and want to pry out any extra information I can get.
The first and most important question is "what do you want to use it for?"
Plinking at the range?
Service Rifle competition?
CQB competitions?
Fondling it in a basement and posting pictures on the internet?
Other?
I think the major issue with STAG is the way CMT branded it - it is very subtle but people in general do not take an animal head on their guns seriously (bushmaster, stag, panther/DPMS.....) It sounds laughable, but consumer psychology is big part of acceptance.