Because to me, it isn't a "they" on the internet selling guns and maybe getting wires crossed or making a typo or being misunderstood or taken out of context, it's Jeff, who I was talking to about music which is an unrelated passion of his, directly telling me something, personally, from one guy to another, as we have talked in the past about a number of different subjects, some gun related, some not.
So for me it's not remotely probable that he just flat out lied about this. It would be the equivalent of sitting on the deck with one of your friends, and having him, out of the blue, mention that some issue he was having at work was the result of some accounting error he hadn't known about, and then later someone suggesting that your friend was lying about it. If you know your friend, you know how likely or not that would be.
I mean really, here are the two options:
1) the gun was never test fired. It left the shop without being checked, and somebody at NEA included fake brass with it so someone would think it had been test fired. It arrived at the store, wasn't racked, then was sold to someone who discovered a known issue with a bunch of NEA guns. The customer sent it back and NEA acknowleged the problem because they'd had a run of guns with the same issue, but in this case, they then test fired the upper without telling anyone, sent the upper back to the retailer pretending it had been previously test fired, and then surreptitiously released the (false) information that it had been test fired through an unsuspecting third party during a private conversation in the hopes that that person would reveal the prior testing, thus absolving NEA of one of a number of complaints, most of which they openly accept. The unsuspecting retailer looks at the gun and corroborates that part of the story, despite being complicit in a seperate conspiracy in which he falsely claims that the gun could be racked depending on how it was held, but that is a lie;
2) the customer was mistaken about the gun having been test fired.
I mean I'm not saying scenario 1 does not explain the situation...but does it REALLY seem more probable than scenario 2?
It only seems more probable If you believe #1 that dweenz is lying about the firearm being unusable out of the box, I believe dweenz because he has no financial stake in this, and his version of events has been consistent. #2 that a person, Ryan with an obvious financial interest in all of this who has given multiple contradictory accounts of what he did or didn't do is telling the truth.
It would be biblical.![]()
I personally cocked Dweenz gun before it left as I do all NEA's before they leave here. I did so from the low ready not shouldered.
I have his gun right here, with his repair job he did...filed the plate a bit.
Ryan
How did you #### mine with no BCG in it?
It only seems more probable If you believe #1 that dweenz is lying about the firearm being unusable out of the box, I believe dweenz because he has no financial stake in this, and his version of events has been consistent. #2 that a person, Ryan with an obvious financial interest in all of this who has given multiple contradictory accounts of what he did or didn't do is telling the truth.
Interestingly I was just chatting with someone from NEA and his description of their testing trap put it fairly low...apparently they don't test from a normal shooting position, they shoot from around the waist.
My guess, then, is that their shooting position is similar to the position Ryan was running the charge handle from.
According to them, uppers and lowers are tested and shipped, which frankly makes sense as it would be extra work to then swap lowers, and you would have an untested combo, basically making the test firing a waste of time and ammo. Even if you only view NEA as a self-interested business, it's hard to think of a reason they would test the guns, change them, and then cross their fingers and ship the untested version. Why do the extra work for an untested end result?
So by far the most reasonable conclusion here is that the gun was fired. If it was fired, it was probably possible to run the charge handle from some angle or other at that time.
Whether something changed between that time and Dweenz's experience with it is about the only question I personally have left...is it possible that the washer shifted somehow, etc.
Otherwise this seems simply to be another example of the known previous issue with NEA guns in which some were assembled with an out of spec plate.
In general, though, that plate could not have been WAY too big, just because the funs which were shipped that way were, I believe, getting test fired.
So in most cases the interference cannot have been so great that it would have blocked any CH movement.
Interestingly I was just chatting with someone from NEA and his description of their testing trap put it fairly low...apparently they don't test from a normal shooting position, they shoot from around the waist.
My guess, then, is that their shooting position is similar to the position Ryan was running the charge handle from.
According to them, uppers and lowers are tested and shipped, which frankly makes sense as it would be extra work to then swap lowers, and you would have an untested combo, basically making the test firing a waste of time and ammo. Even if you only view NEA as a self-interested business, it's hard to think of a reason they would test the guns, change them, and then cross their fingers and ship the untested version. Why do the extra work for an untested end result?
So by far the most reasonable conclusion here is that the gun was fired. If it was fired, it was probably possible to run the charge handle from some angle or other at that time.
Whether something changed between that time and Dweenz's experience with it is about the only question I personally have left...is it possible that the washer shifted somehow, etc.
Otherwise this seems simply to be another example of the known previous issue with NEA guns in which some were assembled with an out of spec plate.
In general, though, that plate could not have been WAY too big, just because the funs which were shipped that way were, I believe, getting test fired.
So in most cases the interference cannot have been so great that it would have blocked any CH movement.
It shouldn't matter what angle lol what a silly argument.
Lol,
You are awesome, disambiguation must be your speciality.
They definitely should have done that and paid me enormous amounts of money for it.Sounds reasonable, I guess.
But you know, the thing I keep thinking is that if NEA had released their product on M4C, in the same fashion as they have/had on CGN, I think they would have gotten absolutely crucified.
I hope they have worked out the kinks, I really do. However, a lot of people; you especially as a knowledgeable user and customer, have tried to tell them the right way to go to the civilian market with these rifles, and they really didn't listen....
If they had used you as their spokesman/internet forum dude, I think things would have gone much better for them. Or even if they had a good conversation with you and actually implemented some of your suggestions. The report you wrote gives them lots of good areas they should work on. It's all there for them....
I remember correctly yours had a BCG in it and I took it out to check the staking and forgot to put it back it.
Ryan
My upper was test fired, but the lower had clearly not been. For what it's worth.



























