I disagree. Headspacing IS an issue with AR's that is why bolts and barrels should be kept together. Installing a used bolt on a different used barrel is not a good idea.
Top builders like Noveske, MSTN, JTAC fit the bolts to their barrels!!!
The army no longer makes an effort match bolts to weapons. Rare to get the same bolt each time the rifle is drawn from stores.
There may still be some units that do keep track but I doubt they're in the majority.
This is true and we're talking about weapons that have been firing since the 80's and have countless rounds down range. I have an 89 rifle sitting beside me right now and who knows how many bolts have been through it or where the original bolt group is. It still shoots accurately out to 300.
Sorry, but for forensics, maintenance and other reasons, C7 bolts are marked with a number that matches a specific gun... at least until last year...
the m14 rifles that were sold here have the serial number on the bolt. this is because the us national guard armories stored the bolts in a safe and the gun locked in the rack.
Sorry, but for forensics, maintenance and other reasons, C7 bolts are marked with a number that matches a specific gun... at least until last year...
So all of this points to the fact that bolt hogs are either cheap or dangerous?
Sorry, but for forensics, maintenance and other reasons, C7 bolts are marked with a number that matches a specific gun... at least until last year...
Well GGFGs, R22Rs, bolt numbers are respected, So are they from deployed troops leaving canada for Nato and UN missions...
Not sure how your regiment handles it...
Reaper, any input ??
M14 bolts are not interchangable between rifles they do wear into that particular rifle and are not easily swapped between other rifles requires a armourer to fit the boltsif you move ar15 bolts around you should have a set of chamber gages. they don't cost much and it is a safety measure. the m14 rifles that were sold here have the serial number on the bolt. this is because the us national guard armories stored the bolts in a safe and the gun locked in the rack.
Unit Rifle teams try and keep the rifle and the bolts together
Security and storage regulations. Been that way with small arms when I started doing the army thing 84, and probably decades before then.




























