Geissele Automatic at SHOT Show

Don’t miss the Geissele Automatics booth (#15162) at SHOT Show 2016. They will be showing off their new line of scope mounts and charging handle.

You might even get the chance to be locked in a glass box with a tornado so people can watch you flail around like you are in a swarm of bees. It sounds terrible but, if you do well, you might just come out with some really nice gear.

geissele SHOT Show

From Geissele:

Come by the Geissele booth and check out our Giveaway Booth! Each day we will be giving out our VIP card for the attendees of the show. This year we will be doing 35% off SSA’s and SSA-E’s, and 30% off everything else. Each VIP card also doubles as a raffle ticket that can be used to enter for a chance to jump in the Geissele Giveaway Booth. Winners are selected at 10AM and 4PM each day. In addition to triggers, rails, and tools that can be won in the booth, we will also have a Golden Ticket for a chance to win a custom rifle built by us with the help from Cross Machine Tool (CMT) and Leatherwood/Hi-Lux Optics.

Faxon Firearms STREAMLINE Handguards

Faxon Firearms has released the details of their new line of handguards. The STREAMLINE Handguards features a fairly slim profile, relatively light weight, plenty of M-LOK attachment slots to go around, and more.

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From Faxon Firearms:

Faxon Firearms, manufacturers of the ARAK platform rifle system, is pleased to announce the release and shipment to dealers of its STREAMLINE series of handguards.

True to their namesake, the new Streamline handguards are a sleek and low-profile solution for those looking for a slimmer handguard with flexible mounting. Further, the Streamline features an uninterrupted MIL-STD 1913 “Picatinny” rail across the top and 7 facets of M-LOK cuts at the 90 and 45-degree facets. Rail slots are directly engraved with “T” marks during machining to identify accessory placement anodized or if customers opt for custom coatings.

45-degree facets. Rail slots are directly engraved with “T” marks during machining to identify accessory placement anodized or if customers opt for custom coatings.

The handguards are released in four lengths, 15”, 13”, 9”, and 7”. The handguard is 100% made in the USA from extruded 6061 aluminum. The handguards are hard-coat anodized black and feature a steel barrel nut. Mounting is extremely simple with common tools and the handguard features alignment tabs to ensure it cannot rotate during extreme use.

“We are thrilled to launch our next product line, keeping within our Company Ethos: ‘Quality. Innovation. Service.’ The new Streamline series keeps it simple while delivering incredible performance,” remarked Nathan Schueth, Director of Operations & Sales. “The handguards continue our push to make the best value products for the top and front of Modern Sporting Rifles. When customers think of uppers, think Faxon.”

The Streamline series is now available direct from Faxon Firearms and through its Dealer network. Launch partners include AIM Surplus, Recoil Gunworks, and Parallax Tactical

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Specifications:

  • 100% Made in the USA
  • Material: 6061 Aluminum
  • Finish: Hard Coat Anodizing (Black)
  • Lengths: 15”, 13”, 9”, 7”
  • Weight (Without Barrel Nut): .8 Lbs, .72 lbs, .52 lbs, .40 lbs
  • Mounting Hardware: .19 lbs
  • Height (Top of Rail to M-LOK Facet): 1.98”
  • Height (Top of Rail to Bottom of Mounting): 2.37”
  • Width: 1.54”

Coming Soon: Magpul PRS GEN3

The new Magpul PRS GEN3 has a host of new features with none more impressive than its compatibility with just about every receiver extension you could ever want to use it with including the Vltor A5.

From Magpul:

An optimized update of the revolutionary Magpul Precision Rifle Stock (PRS) for the AR15/M4 and SR-25 platforms, the PRS GEN3 is compatible with carbine, rifle, and A5-length receiver extensions for unrivaled compatibility. Featuring tool-less adjustments for comb height and length of pull, rotation-limited QD sling mounts, and a height and cant-adjustable rubber butt pad, the PRS GEN3 remains the finest precision stock available for AR-pattern weapons.

Additional information and features:

The PRS GEN3 is a field precision stock for AR15/M16 and AR10/SR25 platforms, featuring tool-less length of pull and cheek piece height adjustment.

With solid adjustments for length of pull and cheek piece height via aluminum detent knobs, the PRS GEN3 (Precision Rifle/Sniper) stock provides a stable interface and is intended for semi-automatic sniper or varmint type rifles. Offering a nearly universal fit, it installs on rifle-length receiver extensions as well as mil-spec carbine and A5-length tubes. Includes a cant/height-adjustable rubber butt-pad and rotation-limiting QD sling swivel cups as well as M-LOK slots on the bottom for rear monopod mounting.

Made in U.S.A.

  • Mounts to rifle-length, mil-spec carbine, or A5-length receiver extension tubes (not included)
  • Enhanced strength butt-plate withstands severe impact and recoil up to .50 BMG
  • Rubber butt-pad provides positive shoulder purchase to prevent slippage and is adjustable for both cant and height
  • Machined aluminum LOP and Cheek Piece adjustment knobs with positive locking click detents
  • Steel adjustment shafts finished with Melonite® for wear and corrosion resistance
  • All aluminum components finished with MIL-A-8625F, Type III, Class 2 hard anodizing
  • Bottom M-LOK slots provide additional sling mounting possibilities or for attaching 1913 Picatinny rails for use with a monopod
  • Sling Mounts
    • Front/Rear – rotation limited QD sling swivel mounts (swivels not included)
    • Rear – 1.25″ aluminum sling loop (left-right reversible)

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Reducing AR-15 Weight the Right Way

I have written about reducing the weight of your AR-15 and lightweight AR-15 accessories a lot because I think it is important to keep your rifle as light as is practical. However, there is a right and wrong way to go about it. The low hanging fruit of just swapping stocks is probably not the right way.

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I try not to spend too much time thinking or talking about “balance” because if you do your part aligning the sights and working the trigger balance won’t matter much and it comes down to preference in many cases. However, if you go about reducing the weight of your carbine the wrong way, it can become an issue. You can make a rifle actually feel heavier by removing weight from the back end which shifts the balance forward. That can become an issue over the duration of a multi-day carbine course, competition, or just a day at the range.

I have a carbine with a Weapon Outfitters built upper on it that has been a very good performer for me. The upper has a Ballistic Advantage 13.7 BA Hanson Profile barrel with a permanently attached B.E. Meyers M249F flash suppressor to bring it to a non-NFA 16″+. The barrel is covered up with an ALG Defense 13″ EMR V2 with an Impact Weapons Components Hand Stop, LMT Folding Front Sight, and INFORCE WML which are all fairly lightweight components. It is all topped off with a Trijicon TR24 Accupoint. This upper was never meant to be an ultra-light but it shouldn’t feel heavy either. If I put an 6-8 ounce stock on this particular carbine, it feels like a nose-heavy pig. If I put a 12+ ounce stock on it, it actually feels lighter and more like what you would expect a carbine with these components to weigh. In fact, I tested that and three different people thought the rifle was lighter when paired with the heavier stock.

The B5 SOPMOD Bravo Stock is excellent but it is too light for this particular AR.

The B5 SOPMOD Bravo Stock is excellent but it is too light for this particular AR.

Balance isn’t that much of an issue until it becomes an issue. How do you know when it is an issue? Well, the only metric I have found is to balance the rifle on your finger with your hand in a knife hand position. If it balances in front of magazine well or at the leading edge, it is likely to feel heavier than it actually is. If it balances on the front half of the magwell, it will feel fairly neutral. If it balances on the rear of the magwell, you have one heck of a heavy stock and this sort of rear bias is less of an issue (for me at least). In the case of the rifle mentioned above, those 4 ounces added to the butt stock were enough to move the balance point from in front of the mag well to the leading third of the magwell.

Ideally, the balance point of the rifle should be somewhere toward the central part of the magwell so the rifle feels neutral and as light as possible. This balance point will also allow the handling characteristics of the rifle to change as little as possible as you deplete your magazine.

The stock is probably the easiest place to remove weight from your rifle but it is also the most likely to negatively effect the the balance if it is not done as part of an overall lightening effort. If you install a 6 ounce stock as your only lightening effort, you are almost certainly going to end up with a carbine that feels heavier when shouldered. The best place to remove weight in terms of perception is from the front end of the rifle. Think lighter barrel profiles, shorter barrels, and lighter hand guards. These may not be the easiest parts to replace on the gun but they will yield the best results when trying to lighten a rifle.

Bestest Carbine 2

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