I've never handled or fired a high-end M1A gun, but I have had 3 M-305s pass through my hands, and here is my perspective.
For a third or less of what you can spend on a Springfield or LRB, you can get a Norinco. Spend a couple of hundred bucks replacing a few parts [on mine I added good iron sights and an aftermarket recoil spring guide rod, and a surplus GI fiberglass stock]. Take it to a Tactical Teacher clinic and learn some basic tweaks, and you will have a rifle that performs very well, and a lot of good knowledge about the inner workings of your gun. Buy a Springfield and you'll have a better finish and maybe one or two MOA better accuracy.
All this assumes that your M-305 is basically all good...all three of mine were well put together and reliable shooters out of the box, but lemons do crop up. A careful inspection of your gun before purchase [if possible] should preclude this. Obviously I'm a Norinco fan, but Norinco has allowed me to get experience with types of guns I otherwise wouldn't have laid out big money for.
For a third or less of what you can spend on a Springfield or LRB, you can get a Norinco. Spend a couple of hundred bucks replacing a few parts [on mine I added good iron sights and an aftermarket recoil spring guide rod, and a surplus GI fiberglass stock]. Take it to a Tactical Teacher clinic and learn some basic tweaks, and you will have a rifle that performs very well, and a lot of good knowledge about the inner workings of your gun. Buy a Springfield and you'll have a better finish and maybe one or two MOA better accuracy.
All this assumes that your M-305 is basically all good...all three of mine were well put together and reliable shooters out of the box, but lemons do crop up. A careful inspection of your gun before purchase [if possible] should preclude this. Obviously I'm a Norinco fan, but Norinco has allowed me to get experience with types of guns I otherwise wouldn't have laid out big money for.





















































