Rhetorical, I assume. But I can testify that Pappabear and I have a good 20 ARs between us that get low volume use (because of our more long range oriented shooting), and almost never see a cleaning.
Over the last 8 or so years, there's been no functional or mechanical issues with no cleaning of slow fired/low fired ARs.
"What would a $2,000 Geissele Super Duty do that a $500 PSA door buster on Black Friday couldn't do?" - Stopsign32v
RLTW
“What’s New” button, but without GD: https://www.m4carbine.net/search.php...new&exclude=60 , courtesy of ST911.
Disclosure: I am affiliated PRN with a tactical training center, but I speak only for myself. I have no idea what we sell, other than CLP and training. I receive no income from sale of hard goods.
"Cleaning" for me mostly consists of just taking the BCG out, wiping the loose crap off it and re-lubing (I do run my guns a bit wetter than is perhaps necessary). Sometimes the bolt itself gets removed and gets the same treatment, and sometimes not. I will also sometimes swab the chamber out and run an Otis Ripcord down the bore. Overall I've found that the level of thoroughness in my "cleanings" is heavily dependant on how bored I am at the time.
While I had one AR that apparently got dirty enough that when hitting the bolt release the BCG would sometimes be a bit sluggish going into battery I've only ever had one stoppage during firing with an AR that may have been due to the gun being dirty, and I'm not even sure that was the cause as it was just a one-time malfunction.
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