Echo5Charlie
Alpha
Hey everyone, I thought I'd include my notes from the recent purchase of my SAINT rifle. Please excuse the formatting, it was copy and paste from my notes app and I am a horrible writer anyway. This will be ongoing if you all like it. Let me know what you think! (I have pics but getting them to post inline is a PITA)
Going into this I wanted to do a “basic” M4 Carbine (LE6920 analog) in 2021 as the CR6920 is NOT the same as a ~2012-2018 vintage LE6920 - and even in those 6 years there were deviances from the standard. Without delving into the abyss, it was apparent that the basic M4 carbine in a TDP offering was not really offered anymore. The BCM M4 Mod1 was the closest offering I found, but it was not widely offered by resellers - an obvious indicator that the popularity of a basic M4 had come to pass. Upon further reflection I realized that it was moot anyway, not only in current offerings but in my own personal armory - I had a 2012 vintage LE6920, a LE6933, a SPM16, and a CAR-15 that I assembled from quality parts. They all ran and ran well. Bummer.
After some more reflection I realized that I wanted to try something new and slightly outside of my usual bubble of comfort - I wanted to buy a rifle that was marketed by a large company to the masses but was not perceived as on par with top tier manufacturers by the SMEs.
Which one though? I already knew I was not going to go super cheap - it is my money after all! So I needed to settle for a $800-$1,000 rifle. Now, I know some of you are already screaming internally that there are several offerings from top tier manufacturers in that range. You are 100% right, and I already own those. That is NOT the point of what I was doing. I needed to find that Instasnapbook advertisement rifle.
Enter the Springfield Armory SAINT. (Saint is capitalized, why I do not know) Yep, it checked all the boxes. Mass marketed. Large company. Specs that sounded like top tier but didn’t actually mean anything other than marketing. Lifetime warranty. The right price point.
OK. Which one?
Springfield offers (at the time of they writing) no less than 3 versions of the SAINT: SAINT, SAINT Edge, and SAINT Victor. Each of these has sub-models to chose from. The base Saint was likely what a non-gun gun guy/gal in the 25-40 yo range would pick so I settled on the Saint with Picatinny gas block. Part number ST916556BM. This rifle is not what I would personally buy but I could see the appeal of the rifle - it did look nice and had basic features that would make an easy sale based on Internet research or the pitch at the brick-and-mortar Gunshop. Cool.
Now I had to set some reasonable tests as well as expectations for the rifle. It is real easy to shoot it to the point of failure but that can be done with any rifle. Going with a husband/wife combo I figured that *maybe* 500 rounds a year would be shot. Maybe, just maybe, a carbine class would be attended. What ammo would I shoot? What accuracy (precision) requirements would I deem acceptable? Many questions….
Here are the specs from Springfield-armory.com (as of this writing):
The sleek, uncluttered architecture of the Springfield Armory® SAINT® 5.56 makes it the ideal tool for home defense, competition or recreational range time. Top-end Bravo Company M-Lok® compatible handguards include an internal heat shield and plenty of space for accessories. A shot-peened and magnetic particle inspected Carpenter 158 steel bolt offers maximum reliability. Nickel boron-coated fire controls give the SAINT a silky smooth personality, and upgrades like flip-up iron sights come standard.
The pinned Picatinny gas block is intentionally trim and sleek for maximum performance and minimal bulk.
Flip-up sights come standard, ensuring the rifle is ready to rock as soon as you hit the range.
M-Lok® compatible furniture from Bravo Company combines light weight with unsurpassed ruggedness and versatility.
CALIBER
5.56x45mm NATO (.223 REM)
COLOR
Black
BARREL
16" CMV, Melonite®, 1:8
SIGHTS
Low Profile Adjustable Flip-Up
UPPER RECEIVER
Forged 7075 T6 Aluminum, Type III Hardcoat Anodized, Forward Assist, M4 Feed Ramps
LOWER RECEIVER
Forged 7075 T6 Aluminum, Type III Hardcoat Anodized, Accu-Tite™ Tension System
BOLT CARRIER GROUP
M16 w/ Carpenter 158 Steel Bolt, HPT/MPI, Melonite®
GAS SYSTEM
Direct Impingement Mid-Length, Picatinny Pinned Gas Block
HANDGUARD
BCMGUNFIGHTER™ PMCR, M-Lok®
STOCK
BCMGUNFIGHTER™ Mod 0
TRIGGER
Nickel Boron Coated GI
MUZZLE DEVICE
A2 Flash Hider
RECEIVER EXTENSION
Mil-Spec
RECEIVER END PLATE
Mil-Spec
BUFFER ASSEMBLY
Carbine "H" Heavy Tungsten Buffer
CHARGING HANDLE
GI Style
SAFETY SWITCH
Single Side
TRIGGER GUARD
BCMGUNFIGHTER™
GRIP
BCMGUNFIGHTER™ Mod 3
MAGAZINES
(1) 30-Round Magpul PMAG Gen M3
WEIGHT
6 lbs 11 oz
LENGTH
32.25" - 35.5"
MSRP
$995
https://www.springfield-armory.com/...es/saint-556-m-lok-ar-15-rifle-pic-gas-block/
Street Price (2021) - $895 or less
Initial Impressions
Fit & Finish
Good to go. No glaring assembly issues (and none were subsequently found), no finish blems. Would put on par with Colt/DD/BCM, etc
Sights
Ugh…these remind me of UTG quality. The finish alone is cringe-inducing. The rear sight windage know requires VERY little torque to manipulate - you can throw off your windage by simply deploying the sight if you use the knob as a grasping point. The locking pin is cheap and a solid hit would damage it despite it being steel with a steel locking plate in the base of the sight. The detent for deploy/stow is plastic. I got a kick out of the rear sight index marks, there are too many for the limited movement of the aperture. If this rifle pans out these are going away and likely being replaced by Magpul MBUS Pros or Troys.
Stock set
BCM. Enough said. I do like the grip angle very much. The stock is solid and I appreciate the large paddle for adjustment. Using a QD swivel is one position only - horizontal to the bore. Mounting a flashlight will be interesting as there isn’t a whole lot of MLok slots and they are set at the 45 degree point.
BCG
Looks good, but it is phosphated and not Melonite as advertised. Perhaps a COVID supply issue?
Overall disappointments
Lack of front sling mount, lack of rear receiver mount, GI style charging handle, sights.
Going into this I wanted to do a “basic” M4 Carbine (LE6920 analog) in 2021 as the CR6920 is NOT the same as a ~2012-2018 vintage LE6920 - and even in those 6 years there were deviances from the standard. Without delving into the abyss, it was apparent that the basic M4 carbine in a TDP offering was not really offered anymore. The BCM M4 Mod1 was the closest offering I found, but it was not widely offered by resellers - an obvious indicator that the popularity of a basic M4 had come to pass. Upon further reflection I realized that it was moot anyway, not only in current offerings but in my own personal armory - I had a 2012 vintage LE6920, a LE6933, a SPM16, and a CAR-15 that I assembled from quality parts. They all ran and ran well. Bummer.
After some more reflection I realized that I wanted to try something new and slightly outside of my usual bubble of comfort - I wanted to buy a rifle that was marketed by a large company to the masses but was not perceived as on par with top tier manufacturers by the SMEs.
Which one though? I already knew I was not going to go super cheap - it is my money after all! So I needed to settle for a $800-$1,000 rifle. Now, I know some of you are already screaming internally that there are several offerings from top tier manufacturers in that range. You are 100% right, and I already own those. That is NOT the point of what I was doing. I needed to find that Instasnapbook advertisement rifle.
Enter the Springfield Armory SAINT. (Saint is capitalized, why I do not know) Yep, it checked all the boxes. Mass marketed. Large company. Specs that sounded like top tier but didn’t actually mean anything other than marketing. Lifetime warranty. The right price point.
OK. Which one?
Springfield offers (at the time of they writing) no less than 3 versions of the SAINT: SAINT, SAINT Edge, and SAINT Victor. Each of these has sub-models to chose from. The base Saint was likely what a non-gun gun guy/gal in the 25-40 yo range would pick so I settled on the Saint with Picatinny gas block. Part number ST916556BM. This rifle is not what I would personally buy but I could see the appeal of the rifle - it did look nice and had basic features that would make an easy sale based on Internet research or the pitch at the brick-and-mortar Gunshop. Cool.
Now I had to set some reasonable tests as well as expectations for the rifle. It is real easy to shoot it to the point of failure but that can be done with any rifle. Going with a husband/wife combo I figured that *maybe* 500 rounds a year would be shot. Maybe, just maybe, a carbine class would be attended. What ammo would I shoot? What accuracy (precision) requirements would I deem acceptable? Many questions….
Here are the specs from Springfield-armory.com (as of this writing):
The sleek, uncluttered architecture of the Springfield Armory® SAINT® 5.56 makes it the ideal tool for home defense, competition or recreational range time. Top-end Bravo Company M-Lok® compatible handguards include an internal heat shield and plenty of space for accessories. A shot-peened and magnetic particle inspected Carpenter 158 steel bolt offers maximum reliability. Nickel boron-coated fire controls give the SAINT a silky smooth personality, and upgrades like flip-up iron sights come standard.
The pinned Picatinny gas block is intentionally trim and sleek for maximum performance and minimal bulk.
Flip-up sights come standard, ensuring the rifle is ready to rock as soon as you hit the range.
M-Lok® compatible furniture from Bravo Company combines light weight with unsurpassed ruggedness and versatility.
CALIBER
5.56x45mm NATO (.223 REM)
COLOR
Black
BARREL
16" CMV, Melonite®, 1:8
SIGHTS
Low Profile Adjustable Flip-Up
UPPER RECEIVER
Forged 7075 T6 Aluminum, Type III Hardcoat Anodized, Forward Assist, M4 Feed Ramps
LOWER RECEIVER
Forged 7075 T6 Aluminum, Type III Hardcoat Anodized, Accu-Tite™ Tension System
BOLT CARRIER GROUP
M16 w/ Carpenter 158 Steel Bolt, HPT/MPI, Melonite®
GAS SYSTEM
Direct Impingement Mid-Length, Picatinny Pinned Gas Block
HANDGUARD
BCMGUNFIGHTER™ PMCR, M-Lok®
STOCK
BCMGUNFIGHTER™ Mod 0
TRIGGER
Nickel Boron Coated GI
MUZZLE DEVICE
A2 Flash Hider
RECEIVER EXTENSION
Mil-Spec
RECEIVER END PLATE
Mil-Spec
BUFFER ASSEMBLY
Carbine "H" Heavy Tungsten Buffer
CHARGING HANDLE
GI Style
SAFETY SWITCH
Single Side
TRIGGER GUARD
BCMGUNFIGHTER™
GRIP
BCMGUNFIGHTER™ Mod 3
MAGAZINES
(1) 30-Round Magpul PMAG Gen M3
WEIGHT
6 lbs 11 oz
LENGTH
32.25" - 35.5"
MSRP
$995
https://www.springfield-armory.com/...es/saint-556-m-lok-ar-15-rifle-pic-gas-block/
Street Price (2021) - $895 or less
Initial Impressions
Fit & Finish
Good to go. No glaring assembly issues (and none were subsequently found), no finish blems. Would put on par with Colt/DD/BCM, etc
Sights
Ugh…these remind me of UTG quality. The finish alone is cringe-inducing. The rear sight windage know requires VERY little torque to manipulate - you can throw off your windage by simply deploying the sight if you use the knob as a grasping point. The locking pin is cheap and a solid hit would damage it despite it being steel with a steel locking plate in the base of the sight. The detent for deploy/stow is plastic. I got a kick out of the rear sight index marks, there are too many for the limited movement of the aperture. If this rifle pans out these are going away and likely being replaced by Magpul MBUS Pros or Troys.
Stock set
BCM. Enough said. I do like the grip angle very much. The stock is solid and I appreciate the large paddle for adjustment. Using a QD swivel is one position only - horizontal to the bore. Mounting a flashlight will be interesting as there isn’t a whole lot of MLok slots and they are set at the 45 degree point.
BCG
Looks good, but it is phosphated and not Melonite as advertised. Perhaps a COVID supply issue?
Overall disappointments
Lack of front sling mount, lack of rear receiver mount, GI style charging handle, sights.