I won’t say nothing, I will behave, no meme……
Triple dog dare huh….lolSay it. Go ahead… i triple dog dare ya.
I won’t say nothing, I will behave, no meme……
Triple dog dare huh….lolSay it. Go ahead… i triple dog dare ya.
Nice work!Triple dog dare huh….lol
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He doesn’t need encouragement.Say it. Go ahead… i triple dog dare ya.
"First, perform a press check or visual check that a round is chambered by pulling the charging handle back enough to open the bolt and have a look. (Make sure the rifle is pointed in a safe direction first, of course.) Unload by taking out the magazine and ejecting the round. Reload, and see if the issue repeats. If so, try moving the bolt by hand by pulling on it with a fingertip or moving it with your thumb."
While I never had the experience I would think this would be very inconvenient to attempt during a fire fight with enemy rounds flying by.
I think relying on realizing which side of the mag the round is on is dangerous enough. If the rifle is pointed in a safe direction it's a moot point.The best way to do a “press check” or more properly on a M16/4 or MP5 called a “chamber check” is not with the bolt it’s much simpler. They have double stack magazines. You should know if the top ground is on the left or right. After loading and working then bolt drop the mag and peek. If the opposite round is now on too you are good.
Nothing good happens from fiddling with your bolt both on your rifle or self!!!
Agreed. Taking the time to check the magazine is not “easier” (my opinion)I think relying on realizing which side of the mag the round is on is dangerous enough. If the rifle is pointed in a safe direction it's a moot point.
If your bolt is closed and your charging handle pulls back with no resistance, there's a round in the chamber most likely. Doing a press check on an AR ( or anything really) isn't something I would do normally. If you're in a life or death situation and you want to know if the chamber is loaded, pull the charging handle.
I think relying on realizing which side of the mag the round is on is dangerous enough. If the rifle is pointed in a safe direction it's a moot point.
If your bolt is closed and your charging handle pulls back with no resistance, there's a round in the chamber most likely. Doing a press check on an AR ( or anything really) isn't something I would do normally. If you're in a life or death situation and you want to know if the chamber is loaded, pull the charging handle.
Yup, good old SPORTS. Slap (up on the magazine), pull, observe, release, tap (the forward assist) and squeeze/shoot. And this was the immediate action drill way beyond VN era.Not sure if it is necessary or not. I do not see trainers mentioning it during immediate action drills any longer.
Back in the day, those Vietnam vets would smack you in the back of the head if you missed that step performing SPORTS during immediate action.
Not sure if it is necessary or not. I do not see trainers mentioning it during immediate action drills any longer.
Back in the day, those Vietnam vets would smack you in the back of the head if you missed that step performing SPORTS during immediate action.
FWIW, I’ve seen more than a few “pros” do it that way—check the round position in the mag.I think relying on realizing which side of the mag the round is on is dangerous enough. If the rifle is pointed in a safe direction it's a moot point.
If your bolt is closed and your charging handle pulls back with no resistance, there's a round in the chamber most likely. Doing a press check on an AR ( or anything really) isn't something I would do normally. If you're in a life or death situation and you want to know if the chamber is loaded, pull the charging handle.
Seriously?Had to google ar15 forward assist. never seen one before
I put together an Aero M4E1 without the FA in the FDE finish.It's a no harm no foul thing for me. I perfer that it's there especially since it's standard on most ARs. One could also simply manually push the bolt forward within a split second instead of using the forward assist.
Now because of this thread and because I have the yearning to pick up an Aero Precision M4E1 stripped upper w/o F/A for my next assembly just because I don't have an AR in that configuration yet.
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Nice! I actually like the simplistic look.
Well our beloved @10mmLife is rather simple, that’s why he just goes bananas over any yeet cannon……Nice! I actually like the simplistic look.
Seriously, that is a nice looking rifle!Nice! I actually like the simplistic look.
As long as your barrel is either chrome-lined or nitrided and you keep your rifle clean and lubed you'll likely never need a FA. .
So that's what them doohicky things on the side of the gun is called. I always thought it was like a thumb trigger firer thing. it never worked though. every time i pushed it nothing ever happened. i just figured it was broke.Seriously?