Home AR-15 The AR Gets It's First Innovative Twist in Decades!

The AR Gets It's First Innovative Twist in Decades!

87
46

The AR has had very few changes throughout the years but now there is something that can change the platform and make it cool and interesting again while maintaining most of what makes the platform great.

ATTENTION: All opinions shared are just that, my opinions. I’m not a lawyer nor have I ever claimed to be one I simply commentate on different scenarios to give you examples of what can happen out in the real world.

Note to readers: Please click the share buttons above or below. Forward this article to your email lists. Crosspost on your blog site, social media, internet forums. etc.

46 COMMENTS

  1. 1:02 THANK YOU!!! Ihave been trying to get people to understand that is exactly what it is! No pew pew for you means mr bad guy, either from next door or from across the ocean, has an easier time.

  2. We a well regulated militia have been allowing our 2nd amendment to be infringed ,harass , violated by the so called government , when

    The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1791, protects the right of the people to keep and bear arms, stating that a well-regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state

    “Arms”, in short means **ARMAMENTS**
    weapons, explosives, and other military equipment: Use the noun armament to talk about the kind of weapons that armies use when they wage wars. A tank, for example, is an armament. The word armament is good for describing heavy duty weaponry and the equipment that's associated with it, like bombs, fighter jets, tanks, and assault rifles

    Ain’t nothing wrong with protecting ourselves from bullies , we been protecting one selves since God kick us out of the paradise and still worshiping him….

  3. I agree with the part about the founding fathers! It (the AR platform) has gone beyond Stoner's intended military usage to the ultimate modular gun platform — you can trick out your gun as much as you want to, or you can go as cheap as you want to — I was just talking with a guy the other day who said his whole AR cost him about $200, because he kept getting parts on the cheap. I would like to think the founding fathers would approve of a bunch of Americans being that much in love with our guns.

  4. Muzzle-loading arms were state of the art in the mid 14th century. By the time of the Constitutional Convention rifles and repeating arms were the state of the art.

  5. The MDP 9 from Angstadt had issues at first but now it's a solid roller delayed ar9 pcc. It has no buffer tube yet it cuts recoil by 60% by my estimation. And the ar57 finally has all the bugs worked out only thing keeping it held back is not having the option of a Full Auto bolt. I was lucky enough to find 2 used ones with the proper buffers. Now I can run it with an frt.

  6. I don't really consider a conversion kit to be an innovation of the design and this is actually a conversion of a conversion. First you've added an AR-180 upper and bolt/recoil spring assembly to an AR-15 lower, then added another assembly to convert it into a bullpup variant. To make matters worse, it makes the magazine catch harder to access and as you said, leaves an open pic-rail for a place to establish a cheek weld. You'd be far better off to just buy a bullpup rifle that was designed to be a bullpup rifle from the beginning. Conversions like these are a bad idea in my book. They'll end up costing just as much as a new bullpup would cost and be plagued with reliability problems from all of the conversions. K.I.S.S.

Leave a Reply