- Location
- Calgary, Alberta
So I was in the US last week and I happened to walk into a range where the FN rep had showed up to show off all the goodies. I'm afraid this was a big surprise to me so unfortunately I left the camera at the hotel. 
Everyone was interested in the SCAR so I only got my hands on it for a few minutes. Basically the lower is made of some sort of ABS type plastic and the upper is some sort of sheet alloy and it has what looked like a conventional gas piston system to me. The stock was a plastic folding affair and also is adjustable in and out. I thought the way it locked closed was a bit goofy, latches into a cutout into the plastic case deflector.
The bolt head was noticeably larger than on an AR-15 with much larger locking lugs, obviously to stop them cracking.
Anyway, when I finally got to fire my allotted two rounds I have to say I wasn't terribly impressed with it, the trigger pull was pretty stiff (even for a new rifle), and there are rails on all three sides of the handguard so that made it uncomfortable to shoot with no foregrip attached. The safety is also stiffer than on an AR-15. The pistol grip is the standard A2 grip so obviously you can fit something better.
The mag release is ambidextrous but the bolt release is basically the same as on an AR-15. Easier to #### though as the bolt handle is on the left side (and can be swapped over I think). Can't really comment on accuracy at short range with two rounds, but the muzzle brake it was fitted with (I'm assuming this is not what is on the military version) seemed to work okay.
I have no doubt it's more durable and more reliable than an AR-15, but given that the asking price was $3,200 I couldn't see the point personally. You can easily get your AR-15 working very reliably indeed for that kind of money and with a better trigger pull to boot. Really that puts it in the realm of "collector only" status like the H&K Mark 23 as far as I'm concerned. I'm willing to bet if the Obama paranoia evaporates the price will halve. As a military rifle I was a bit surprised at how tall it is, because getting low with it from prone is basically impossible.
The serial number was bar-coded. Not sure why I'm mentioning that, it was just a bit unusual.
No-one was particularly interested in the other guns, so I basically nearly broke my thumb loading the 50-round mags for the PS90. That is a seriously neat gun, but as a range-only gun with a restricted 5-round mag in Canada, it would be pointless, imho. Also a "collector only" gun as a result.
However I think Ruger misses a trick if they don't chamber the 10/22 in 5.7x28 at some point as that would be a neat varmint gun.
Just wear a cup if you ever have a go with one because it ejects downwards and slightly backwards. Ouch. Or more accurately, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, holy ####, does this thing ever run out of ammo?
Also had a go with a Five Seven pistol, which I tried before a long time ago, the current civilian version has better sights (hugh adjustable sights) and a stippled grip compared to what I remember. However it has an even longer trigger reach than the Beretta 92 I think, which is great for me because I have really long fingers but I'm probably in the minority there. The main thing that annoyed me about it was that the trigger is grooved and this is a gun which really needs a smooth trigger.
Everyone was interested in the SCAR so I only got my hands on it for a few minutes. Basically the lower is made of some sort of ABS type plastic and the upper is some sort of sheet alloy and it has what looked like a conventional gas piston system to me. The stock was a plastic folding affair and also is adjustable in and out. I thought the way it locked closed was a bit goofy, latches into a cutout into the plastic case deflector.
The bolt head was noticeably larger than on an AR-15 with much larger locking lugs, obviously to stop them cracking.
Anyway, when I finally got to fire my allotted two rounds I have to say I wasn't terribly impressed with it, the trigger pull was pretty stiff (even for a new rifle), and there are rails on all three sides of the handguard so that made it uncomfortable to shoot with no foregrip attached. The safety is also stiffer than on an AR-15. The pistol grip is the standard A2 grip so obviously you can fit something better.
The mag release is ambidextrous but the bolt release is basically the same as on an AR-15. Easier to #### though as the bolt handle is on the left side (and can be swapped over I think). Can't really comment on accuracy at short range with two rounds, but the muzzle brake it was fitted with (I'm assuming this is not what is on the military version) seemed to work okay.
I have no doubt it's more durable and more reliable than an AR-15, but given that the asking price was $3,200 I couldn't see the point personally. You can easily get your AR-15 working very reliably indeed for that kind of money and with a better trigger pull to boot. Really that puts it in the realm of "collector only" status like the H&K Mark 23 as far as I'm concerned. I'm willing to bet if the Obama paranoia evaporates the price will halve. As a military rifle I was a bit surprised at how tall it is, because getting low with it from prone is basically impossible.
The serial number was bar-coded. Not sure why I'm mentioning that, it was just a bit unusual.
No-one was particularly interested in the other guns, so I basically nearly broke my thumb loading the 50-round mags for the PS90. That is a seriously neat gun, but as a range-only gun with a restricted 5-round mag in Canada, it would be pointless, imho. Also a "collector only" gun as a result.
However I think Ruger misses a trick if they don't chamber the 10/22 in 5.7x28 at some point as that would be a neat varmint gun.
Just wear a cup if you ever have a go with one because it ejects downwards and slightly backwards. Ouch. Or more accurately, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch, holy ####, does this thing ever run out of ammo?
Also had a go with a Five Seven pistol, which I tried before a long time ago, the current civilian version has better sights (hugh adjustable sights) and a stippled grip compared to what I remember. However it has an even longer trigger reach than the Beretta 92 I think, which is great for me because I have really long fingers but I'm probably in the minority there. The main thing that annoyed me about it was that the trigger is grooved and this is a gun which really needs a smooth trigger.