Armedsask said:I haven't bought an AR15 and don't plan on it any time soon.
I'll think about buying one when I can afford a piston upper.
Armedsask said:I haven't bought an AR15 and don't plan on it any time soon.
I'll think about buying one when I can afford a piston upper.
I guess it could both ways - elevate the resale value, because there are relatively few around / deflate the resale value since only 10% of the shooting population would be interested in it.
beltfed said:Because 99.9% of them use the gas impingement method?
ARs have been working just fine for decades without a mechanical piston, why fix something that isn't broken?
Armedsask said:I haven't bought an AR15 and don't plan on it any time soon.
I'll think about buying one when I can afford a piston upper.
Jeremy said:I think I'm probably one of the very few guys around in this site who hasn't given and bought an AR.
UncleWalther said:Nice that it is left handed. However, I wonder if that will impact the re-sale value significantly?
Disaster Monkey said:Just don't even think of selling it. You're left handed, and you bought a left handed rifle ... it was made for you ... keep it!![]()
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeremy
I think I'm probably one of the very few guys around in this site who hasn't given and bought an AR.
Don't you find that makes you feel like less of a man?C'mon, buy one!
beltfed said:Because 99.9% of them use the gas impingement method?
ARs have been working just fine for decades without a mechanical piston, why fix something that isn't broken?




























