That is so funny...The lower went together so easy, I was sure I must have done something wrong. I took the completed rifle out to the range, put 2 rds in a 20 rd mag, laid the rifle on a bag on the bench, covered it with a towel, tied a piece of string to the trigger and pulled the trigger...it cycled, and I was so excited I shot that rifle the rest of the day. When I got home I lubed the Colts and put them away. I still have that book...How did we ever get along before YouTube and the Internet.....lol......
I have several PSAs, a couple of Rugers, and a newer Bushmaster. Never had a problem with them.
It comes down to priorities. None of the people I know IRL who claim to be unable to afford anything but bottom bin bargain cobbled together rifles actually live in poverty, and they waste plenty of money on frivolous things like the most expensive satellite tv packages, tobacco products, booze, lotto tickets, and other things that separate poor people from their money. Or they own multiple bottom bin PSA weekly deal specials instead of putting that money toward two good rifles. They are poor minded and choose temporary instant gratification rather than being patient, saving a little more, and getting what they really want.
Most of the time, it's really nothing more than a hobby to them anyway. They don't really think they'll ever be in a situation where they need to use it to defend themselves or their family, so they turn on the tv, fire up another Marlboro, crack open a Budweiser, scratch off that lotto ticket, and see what that extra $399 in their bank account can buy from PSA this month.
I would pull another "high $" rifle out of my safe and move on with life.Why does everyone with a high $ rifle think that IF they ever have to really use it for an extended period of time, that it won't be lost, stolen, damaged, or shot? What do you when your rifle quits or is gone? Refuse to use a PSA? Sit it out until your new BCM arrives?
Your right I dont buy lotto tickets. But when I get them as gifts I've never won more than $2 or another ticket. I play that house money until its gone.
I've had a new Glock, new revolvers, and new (used kit) AK's that didnt work from the box.
I just got a replacement Beretta Tomcat in the mail to replace the one that broke its frame AND its slide. (The bar that holds the halves together broke off while firing)
I dont abuse guns. I keep them pretty clean and replace worn springs, etc.
This is also why I normally carry two guns. I cant trust any of them too much.
"Franken guns" are fine if you know what you're doing, and use decent parts. Cheap where you can, quality where it's essential.
If every damn part in the gun is the absolute cheapest quality you could find, that level of tolerance stacking can be bad joo-joo.
The way to build on the cheap is, not always to buy the cheapest retail, but scour this board and others for steals and deals, and even trades.
People who spend a lot on their ARs need to let others know. The 1911 world is the exact same. When two products fill the same niche, but one costs 4x that of the other, price will become a symbol of status.
This conversation isn't "What do you do with your expensive AR?" for a reason. It would instantly derail when nothing that special emerges and people start speculating about things they could be doing, but aren't.
Bookmarks