I've owned one of the recent models and put approximately 1000rnds through it with no issues whatsoever.
I had only the following two complaints:
-Safety is ridiculously tough to manipulate
-The receiver and handguard don't mate/lock-up perfectly; barrel movement/play can be introduced by knocking barrel one way or the other which of course affects accuracy.
Ultimately I sold the rifle because of the handguard/receiver fit.
If the fitment between upper and lower were to get addressed I would 100% buy another one; great rifle otherwise.
I've owned one of the recent models and put approximately 1000rnds through it with no issues whatsoever.
I had only the following two complaints:
-Safety is ridiculously tough to manipulate
-The receiver and handguard don't mate/lock-up perfectly; barrel movement/play can be introduced by knocking barrel one way or the other which of course affects accuracy.
Ultimately I sold the rifle because of the handguard/receiver fit.
If the fitment between upper and lower were to get addressed I would 100% buy another one; great rifle otherwise.
None of them.
This country turned it's back on me during Covid and still continues to discriminate against me.
I'm no longer a patriotic Canadian.
The Canadian flag doesn't mean a whole lot to me anymore. This country has turned into a toilet. Give me back my country and I'll slap a flag on my rifle.
The Canadian flag doesn't mean a whole lot to me anymore. This country has turned into a toilet. Give me back my country and I'll slap a flag on my rifle.
Yes, you have to loosen the set screw before taking it apart. That set screw is what's locking the aluminum upper extrusion to the steel internal receiver, and what eliminates any wiggle between them that would throw off POI/POA.
Spec is 50 in/lbs when you retighten.
I haven't really been following the various issues closely, what was the issue with the bolts, when was it fixed and is this issue considered a warranty fix?
North Sylva's getting some pretty good feedback so far, maybe they will weigh in?