Naw, there IS a difference.
My guns run smoother, and are less jumpy under recoil, with H2 buffers as opposed to standard or H.
Many other folks have also had this actual, physical experience.
Naw, there IS a difference.
My guns run smoother, and are less jumpy under recoil, with H2 buffers as opposed to standard or H.
Many other folks have also had this actual, physical experience.
In that test the carbine spring/H6 equipped guns also outperformed the A4, equaled the A5 on reliability, and the A5 had a failure to lock back, when the H6 didn’t. The stoppages that occurred with the A5 and H6 equipped guns were all bad mags and light strikes except for the one failure to lock back with A5. Extrapolate what you will from that.
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From my experiences, I don’t think the A5 performs as well as well as a carbine/H or H2.
Black River Tactical
BRT OPTIMUM Hammer Forged Chrome Lined Barrels - 11.5", 12.5", 14.5", 16"
BRT EZTUNE Preset Gas Tubes - PISTOL, CAR, MID, RIFLE
BRT Bolt Carrier Groups M4A1, M16 CHROME
BRT Covert Comps 5.56, 6X, 7.62
As the H6 buffer (5.2 oz) is about the same weight as a rifle buffer (5 oz), it's performance shouldn't come as a big surprise. I haven't tested the H6 or the H3 (5.4 oz). I don't have any on hand.
Recoil was softer with the A5 with green spring and A5H2 buffer than the H buffer with standard carbine spring with 11.5 inch suppressed uppers. Recoil with the H2 buffer was almost as soft as with the A5H2 combo.
The softest and flattest recoiling combo I tested was the A5H2 and green spring with a 20 inch HBar profile barrel and Battlecomp. The reticle hardly moved at all during recoil.
Thanks for the info.
Last edited by MistWolf; 09-10-21 at 11:31.
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