But they said it wasn't due to hammer follow??? Without an auto sear, all they could hope to accomplish is keeping the disconnector from grabbing the hammer...right?
But they said it wasn't due to hammer follow??? Without an auto sear, all they could hope to accomplish is keeping the disconnector from grabbing the hammer...right?
I am not concerned with what "they" said. I said that installing an M-16 FCG will cause an AR to fire more than one round per trigger pull with the selector in "Auto" - a correct statement.
At any rate, the OP asked about mechanical concerns with installing an M-16 selector only. I believe there is no mechanical reason against it. I personally would not install one unless it was impossible to find a semi selector.
Andy
Nope.
On semi it will fire.
Flipped 180 to where "AUTO" would normally be it'll fire in semiautomatic mode. Unless you have shitty disconnector timing there is no full-auto sear to release the hammer once the bolt is locked.
Olympic Arms sold metric ass-loads of AR rifles and carbines with GI selectors in the 80s and early 90s that would go past 90-degrees. New-old stock selectors eventually dried up as the assault rifle ban kicked-in in 1994.
It's actually not a problem, because it takes deliberate effort to break your grip and rotate it beyond the second position. It's not something you can do by accident, and even if you did I confirmed through reliability checks that it functions in semi in that position with no change whatsoever.
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