I'm stacked.
That's ok. We argies hate the stupid Americans such as yourself.
For the avoidance of misunderstandings, we only hate the stupid ones . . .
I'm stacked.
I think the latest run on ammo has to do with the government thinking of passing legislation that every s casing has to be stamped with it's own unique serial number that is recorded to the buyer, which would make ammo extremely expensive. There was a run on cigars and tobacco after the cHIPS bill as well. Does that have to do with reich-wing radio as well ?
I actually havent shot an AR15 in years (or an AK for that matter). But I kind of screwed up earlier, I put a deposit down on a lower receiver. I had a Freudian slip there...still looking for a proper upper.
Picked this up yesterday....not impressed at all.
![]()
Sorry to hear that. I haven't bought a gun for a while.
I would love to buy a Steyr Aug. More for the looks than the shooting, though. Something about that gun is just incredibly cool. Plus I'm a lefty, so the switchover configuration is awesome.![]()
I hate being a lefty having to fire the M16. It's not fun getting popped in the face with hot brass.
I always wondered how the military dealt with that. Guess I should have asked here.
The way the receiver is positioned in the frame and the gas assist is situated, I dont *think* a M16 can be made into a left handed gun?
Am I right or wrong?
Nope, you just have the one configuration. Military lefties just suck it up.
Edit: Thankfully, at least we can reconfigure what side of our gas masks the filter is on...
Stag Arms makes lefty AR-15s, so can M-16s be made for lefties?
I believe LnGr already said the military does not, so I I would *assume* you cannot.
The reason I *think* you cant is because the upper receiver is made from a specialized die set used for stamping out the component en masse. Moreover, the ejection port, bolt catch, bolt assembly and the entire trigger/safety assembly are designed to only fit "one-way", so to speak.
Basically, some AR15/M4/M16 manufacturer would have to design, prototype, field test and approve an entirely new and unproven set of specifications for left-handed die sets in complete reverse (or mirrored) of the current crop of proven models in production, use and service.
Its a HUGE engineering problem, let alone the monetary commitment needed from a private company to service a very small percentage of the armed services/civilian population.
But now that I have gone through my best guess (thats what this was, btw), I am going to Google "left handed M16/AR15" and see what happens.
...annnnnnd, nope. They dont exist (supposedly, at least not on a production scale anyway).
Huh?
If yours is ejecting the brass back there's something wrong with it. It should be ejecting at almost 90 degrees and flipping the brass about 6'. I've been shooting AR's and AK's left handed for years and never had a problem.
example of correct ejection:
![]()
I heard Texas is trying to pass a new law, Take Your Gun To Work Law.
![]()
Then why did the military specifically design a "Spent Brass Defelctor" attachment for lefty shooters?
, it would seem the deflector is a pretty standard feature on nearly every M4/M16 in service.
Stag Arms lefty ARs:
http://www.stagarms.com/index.php?cPath=13_21
must be to be left handed all your life. I think if I was born left handed, I would learn to be right handed, or ambidextrous at least.
All I know is I've shot thousands of rounds from multiple M16s shooting left handed with no problem. The only real issue for lefties that is worse than righties is spent powder blow back (into the eyes) shooting into the wind...That happens occasionally because your face is right behind the breech,,, ...I was playing with a 15 last weekend shooting pigs...
WTF?
you mean everyone doesn't have a pistol in their desk already?
No Cosmic, from the prone position. The guy next to me shoots brass in my direction, or it will land on the ground and then roll up onto me
Edit: The AF makes you take 100 shots total. The first 50 for practice, the second 50 for your score. There are ten targets, and you're supposed to use one bullet for each in five positions, which, IIRC, are:
Prone Unsupported
Prone Supported
Kneeling Supported
Standing Supported
Prone w/ Gas Mask
I think I got a 27 last time.
Sarcasm detected.
Arguments like this have convinced me that the end is near and I better stock up.
I fired a Mark-19 last weekend. Huge-calibre bullet, range up to a mile, with a 20m kill radius. For close-up action, I might just stick with a shotgun. And if they come to take it away, they'll have to pry it from my cold lifeless fingers.
I suck at the M16, but since I've only touched one twice, that's understandable. I need practice! And don't get me started on the M9.
I don't.
How'd you get the opportunity to fire one of those?
And FYI, effective range is more like 1500M with an effective kill radius of 5M.
Well ... I got the opportunity to fire off some rounds of the Mark-19 during my National Guard drill last weekend. Because I am a chaplain and am not a lawful combatant, I don't get a chance to do that much. And I'm just repeating what the Sgt told me, range about a mile (a little more than 1500m) and 20m kill radius. Not that I got to blow anything up, it was just practice rounds. What, you think they'd give chaplains real bullets?
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)