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Thread: Take An Extra Upper Or Complete Rifle To Class

  1. #11
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    Yeah, always bring a back up for at least the primary weapon you'll be using in the class. I had a whoopsie moment when building my first AR many years ago, and it wouldn't fire the harder primers on the M193 ammo I had for the class. (it had fired commercial stuff beforehand just fine) Thankfully I had my SCAR as a backup and completed the class with it.
    It's f*****g great, putting holes in people, all the time, and it just puts 'em down mate, they drop like sacks of s**t when they go down with this.
    --British veteran of the Ukraine War, discussing the FN SCAR H.

  2. #12
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    Given that you are going to be moving in a vehicle, weight is not a consideration and length/displacement probably isn't either, I'd take a complete rifle. As long as it's a rifle you have used and it's been proven reliable with the mag/ammo you will be using. If weight and space are an issue, then i'd do the upper and small selection of parts for the lower. Back when my money was tighter, I had no problem going to a carbine class with a spare complete bolt, cam pin, firing pin and firing pin retaining pin, plus oil. Having a complete rifle ready to go and zeroed in will get you back on the training line the fastest.

    In my limited experience of 15yrs AD and going to carbine courses (including EAG), most of the issues I've observed have been upper issues. Specifically sheared bolt lugs, broken bolts (USGI, multiple deployments and train up), a lose gas key (on a frankengun at a class), missing gas rings and Optic malfunctions. It must be noted that 90+% of the shooting I observed both in uniform and out was Semi Auto, full auto is a different game. I had to really think IOT remember a lower receiver malfunction. The only lower issues I've actually witnessed was a group of SIG rifles that had defective magazine catches (4-5 rifles that had been purchased at the same time from the same lot). I have seen guys lose lower parts when they dissembled their trigger groups in the field and one basic trainee that lost his take down pin detent while "cleaning his rifle". I can't recall ever seeing a lower receiver damaged to the point it couldn't be used, even with ones that had been in IED strikes. Your mileage will of course vary, I'm told that parachute jumps tend break rifles in the strangest ways. Also full auto fire will strain different parts of the gun. We had to deadline some 249s at one point because their receiver welds where breaking.

  3. #13
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    Rifle.

    Having taken and taught courses over the last few decades I've had two failures of my own:

    a broken 723 bolt in a Fort Bragg course using a student weapon with untold rounds on it, and --

    a broken extractor pin at the Atlantic Fleet and east coast All-Navy matches.

    The last time I saw someone with anything in a broken lower, he'd broken the plastic butt stock on an M4, mortar-clearing a stoppage from a bad round.

    You can always cannibalize pieces-parts off the spare gun.

  4. #14
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    The nice thing about a complete gun is that you just swap it with out having to do any thinking to make sure that it is an upper that is messing up.That being said, a spare BCG, upper and complete rifle depending on your resources. I put all my guns in a soft side golf travel bag, and literally roll it. Two long guns, two handguns and 2k rounds easy peasy, no hotel lobby odd looks for all you 511 bags....
    The Second Amendment ACKNOWLEDGES our right to own and bear arms that are in common use that can be used for lawful purposes. The arms can be restricted ONLY if subject to historical analogue from the founding era or is dangerous (unsafe) AND unusual.

    It's that simple.

  5. #15
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    Full spare, justification being the loaner gun. Prep it as the loaner setup, and I usually make that into the better tool... or I'll drag my wife's setup along. Frustrating answer is that I make better carbines for her than I do for myself, so it's just riding along taunting me.
    عندما تصبح الأسلحة محظورة, قد يملكون حظرون عندهم فقط
    کله چی سلاح منع شوی دی، یوازي غلوونکۍ یی به درلود
    Semper Fi
    "Being able to do the basics, on demand, takes practice. " - Sinister

  6. #16
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    Just an update after my question on how the class went. I took my favorite rifle that had never malfunctioned as my primary. I had one squib the first day and was able to switch to my spare before extracting the spent case during lunch. The second day I had another squib that blew the primer and shut the rifle down completely until after the class. Again, my spare carried me through. Good advice guys, my class would have been a bust without a spare.

    In case anyone is wondering, the ammo was Hornady Frontier .223 55gr out of the same case. The class itself was awesome and I would recommend a Pat Mac class to anyone. Money well spent.

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by STAMarine View Post
    Just an update after my question on how the class went. I took my favorite rifle that had never malfunctioned as my primary. I had one squib the first day and was able to switch to my spare before extracting the spent case during lunch. The second day I had another squib that blew the primer and shut the rifle down completely until after the class. Again, my spare carried me through. Good advice guys, my class would have been a bust without a spare.

    In case anyone is wondering, the ammo was Hornady Frontier .223 55gr out of the same case. The class itself was awesome and I would recommend a Pat Mac class to anyone. Money well spent.
    Squibs are scary. We had a guy blow the crap out of a nearly new BCM at our last class due to one.

    When did you buy that Hornady? They have had some serious issues with that ammo- your gun would not be the first that got blown up.....
    The truth can only offend those who live a lie.

  8. #18
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    I took only my handloads to classes for that reason. I can eyeball every single primer and output charge, and I've handled every single piece of ammo that will be run.... even if it is just FMJ.
    "What would a $2,000 Geissele Super Duty do that a $500 PSA door buster on Black Friday couldn't do?" - Stopsign32v

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by markm View Post
    I took only my handloads to classes for that reason. I can eyeball every single primer and output charge, and I've handled every single piece of ammo that will be run.... even if it is just FMJ.
    That's funny to me. The guy that blew the crap out of his BCM at my last course.....was shooting his own reloads.

    We were doing a three shot drill. I actually was watching him as I was right behind him in the second relay of shooters. First round went BOOM, then I saw him do "immediate action"- he had the squib and it failed to eject the case fully, next round, full power, KABOOM! Blew mag out of the bottom of the gun, split the upper, bolt was mangled, even toasted his Eotech.....Somehow, he walked away without a scratch....
    The truth can only offend those who live a lie.

  10. #20
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    When I travel to a class, I take two backup rifles. I did loan one out to another student in a class. Same for pistol courses. I’ve never taken a shotgun course, but I’d do the same we’re I to go. I’ve seen so many shotguns go down just hunting and shooting clays that I wouldn’t trust having just one for a training class.

    On reloads: there is a difference between reloads and handloads. There are people good at it and people not so good at it, just as any discipline. Good handloads are better than the best factory ammo, but bad handloads are worse than most al factory ammunition.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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