NEA Upper Handguard a Scorcher?

mmattockx

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I just received an NEA upper handguard to mount an RDS on my vz-58. It fits nice and tight and quality seems good. But it also feels like it is going to be a real hand scorcher when the rifle gets hot. Is this a problem for anybody else? Does anybody have any tips/solutions to keep my fingers untoasted?


Thanks,
Mark
 
No direct experience here (mine's coming tomorrow), but aluminum is not heat conductive like steel is. That said, a lot of people run that rifle with a glove on the left hand (AKs, too) regardless of the handguard.
 
No direct experience here (mine's coming tomorrow), but aluminum is not heat conductive like steel is. That said, a lot of people run that rifle with a glove on the left hand (AKs, too) regardless of the handguard.

Aluminum is second only to copper among common metals for heat conduction. Heat one end of a piece and the other gets hot very quickly, which is the problem with this as a hand guard. What it really needs is an insulating heat shield on the inside of the guard, but there doesn't seem to be any room for that.


Mark
 
I'd definitely be concerned about burning or frying your RDS. A side rail mount is a great option IMHO.

I am mounting the RDS on a low riser because I want it clear of the sights, so that will help the cause in keeping it from melting down, but it is a concern. I find the side mounts far too cumbersome and hideously ugly, but that is just me.


Mark
 
Anybody try using heat shield tape on the inside of the handguard? Is there room for it? Does it stay in place?

I'm thinking that a lower handguard with big vents (like the NEA lower guard) will improve matters, too.
 
I'd definitely be concerned about burning or frying your RDS. A side rail mount is a great option IMHO.

Side rail mount is a decent option, just gotta watch the height so as not to end up with a chin weld rather than a cheek weld, like many setups seen on here.
If you get a solid RDS like an Aimpoint, I can't imagine the temperature frying it. You'd have to burn through a lot of mags pretty quick to fry an Aimpoint. An NCStar on the other hand, you could fry in less than 1 mag, probably only 1 shot.
 
You make a good point. You'll probably need some sort of riser to ensure a good cheek weld with almost any optics you mount on your 58.
 
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