B5 Systems

Archive for the ‘Black Rifle’ Category

BHI Offers A Handy Sling Attachment Tip

Thursday, May 9th, 2013

Blackheart International offered this sling attachment tip.

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It’s something we see all too often, and it drives us crazy…people attaching their rifle sling to the inside of their stock. Slings should be attached to the outside of the stock (the trigger hand side of the rifle). Doing so allows the stock to fit tight into the shoulder when the shooter’s support arm takes up the slack in the sling. A tight fit into the shoulder will provide much more stable shooting geometry and improved accuracy than if the sling is mounted on the inside of the stock. When the sling is adjustable, as in the case with the BHI Quick-Adjust Weapon Sling, stability and accuracy is further enhanced.

www.bhigear.com/bhiquick-adjustrifleslingblack

Law Tactical Gen 2 AR Folding Stock Adapter Available at Extreme Outfitters

Thursday, May 2nd, 2013

The Law Tactical Folding Stock Adapter allows you to modify your AR-style weapon so that the buttstock can be stored to the side and will not affect the cycling of the rifle when the stock is in the open or straight position.

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It works with direct impingement or gas piston systems and fits any A2, carbine, mil spec or commercial buffer tube and stock. It can be used with standard bolt carrier groups including: full auto, semi auto, 5.56 to .308.

As with all weapon accessories, ensure that this device complies with local laws.

http://www.extremeoutfitters.us/lawtacticalgeneration2arfoldingstockadapter

Magpul Introduces the MBUS Pro

Monday, April 29th, 2013

Magpul MBUS Pro Rear - Profile

This week, Magpul Industries is introducing the MBUS Pro front and rear back up sight featuring all steel construction. They are freaking awesome. Right out of the gate, I know some of you are going to say that they ripped off this company or that company. Ok, got it. Now, check the price. MSRP for the Front is $84.95 and Rear is $104.95.

Magpul MBUS Sizes

Naturally, they are Mil Std 1913 compatible and feature positive detents for both up and down functions. Additionally, they are narrow so that they won’t get in the way of other devices such as lasers.

Magpul MBUS Pro Front

The MBUS Pro front sight integrates a rotary-style elevation adjustment knob so no more tools and stows just .432″ above the rail height with standard AR front sight height when deployed for use.

The Rear MBUS Pro is dual aperture and adjustable for windage.

Magpul MBUS Pro Rear

The Rear Sight is .375″ above the rail when stowed and extends to full AR height when in use.

Look for a formal announcement soon from www.Magpul.com.

SIGTac SB15 Stabilizing Brace Launches This Week

Monday, April 29th, 2013

SIG SAUER is introducing a new product this week for AR-pistols that may well change the way you look at these guns.


According to SIG SAUER, the SIGTac SB15 Stabilizing Brace will , “Dramatically Improve the Single-Handed Performance of Buffer Tube Equipped Pistols.” Additionally, they state that it is ATF approved.

Features
– Fits all pistols equipped with an AR-style buffer tube 1.0″ – 1.2″ in diameter.
– ATF Approved
– Veteran Designed
– Made in USA
– Quick and easy to install

A portion of the proceeds from the sale of every SB15 Pistol Stabilizing Brace goes to support the veterans of Honored American Veterans Afield.

Look for these to start going on sale starting at the NRA Annual Meeting in Houston this Friday, in the SIG SAUER booth.

FirstSpear Breakdown Transport Bag

Tuesday, April 23rd, 2013

The FirstSpear Breakdown Transport Bag is designed to take an AR…well, broken down. It will accept will an AR-style upper and lower and incorporates interior 6/12™ attachment points on one wall for MOLLE/PALS, 6/9™ or 6/12™ pockets.

FS AR Bag - Closed

I like the bag’s clean lines that don’t betray its contents. The Breakdown Transport Bag features a carrying handle along one end and will accept the Exigent Circumstances Pack’s shoulder straps via G-hook as well as shoulder strap points.

FS AR Bag

Interior Dimensions
Length 24 1/2
Wide 9 1/4
Dept 5 3/4

Available in Black, Coyote, Ranger Green and MultiCam.

www.first-spear.com

Magpul Releases New Products

Thursday, April 4th, 2013

Magpul has just released several new products including the PMAG 10 AR/M4 GEN M3, MS4 Dual-QD Sling, and the AR/M4 GEN M3 –5 and –10 limiters.

PMAG 10 AR/M4 GEN M3

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After several years stuck in development while we worked on the standard-capacity GEN M3 magazine technology, the PMAG 10 GEN M3 is finally shipping. The PMAG 10 AR/M4 GEN M3 is a 10-round 5.56×45 NATO (.223 Remington) polymer magazine for AR15/M4 compatible weapons. Incorporating new material technology and manufacturing processes for enhanced strength, durability, and reliability, the PMAG 10 provides next-generation performance for those needing lower profile magazines.

MS4 DUAL-QD SLING

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Filling the same mission requirement as the standard MS3 Sling, the MS4 can quickly switch between one-point and two-point configuration. The MS4 maintains webbing material construction and specifications identical to that of the standard MS3, but features a melonite-finished steel D-ring and two heavy-duty push-button QD sling swivels rather than the Magpul Paraclips. This modification allows compatibility with QD sling cups commonly found on lower receivers, receiver end plates, buttstocks, and many low-profile forward QD Sling mounts, including the Magpul RSA-QD.

PMAG AR/M4 GEN M3 MINUS 5 AND MINUS 10 ROUND LIMITERS

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The PMAG Round Limiters install in 10, 20, or 30 round GEN M3 magazines, reducing the magazine capacity by 5 or 10 rounds. Designed for sporting and hunting applications, installation of the Limiter is simple, tool-less, and requires no permanent modification of the magazine body.

www.magpul.com

Canipe Correspondence – Retiring My 416

Saturday, March 30th, 2013

My HK416’s Retirement Party

In late 2009, I traded into an HK416 10” upper. With a cold-hammer forged 10.39” (as per HK) barrel widely regarded as the finest production rifle barrels in the world and a gas piston operating system, this gun was my go-to rifle for about 3 ½ years. I knew the back story of US Special Operations units seeking an M4 replacement with enhanced durability and reliability, which led to the development of the 416 between a US Army unit and Heckler and Koch. The platform today enjoys widespread service in many LE and military organizations across the globe. It’s a sad day, that I thought would have come a couple years ago, but it’s time for my 416 to go into the back of the safe. I haven’t been able to kill it, but I want to let it die with dignity. Plus parts are expensive, and I want it to remain functional enough to shoot when I’m bored.

Canipe's 416

I kept a pretty accurate round count out to 50K rounds. After that, I started counting by the hundreds. As of its last firing on the 14th of March at the Fairfax County, VA range facility, it topped 67,000 rounds. About 17,000 of those rounds were suppressed. When I got the upper, they were going for about $5K on the secondary market. I was into mine for about $2K and some change, which I think was a bargain any way you look at it. Is the cost of mine twice as much as a top-end DI upper? Yes. How many barrels and bolts would I have bought in 67,000 rounds in a DI SBR? I don’t know, but I bet it makes the margin close in pretty evenly. My partners and I often took guesses when a bolt would break, or the gas rings on the piston would need replacing, or the extractor would break. I must have some kind of luck, because none of that ever happened, and other than the buffer spring at 40K I never changed an operating part on this rifle. The gun stayed in one pretty consistent configuration for the entire time I owned it save for the hand guard, which I swapped for a prototype from Geissele Automatics early in 2012, and a riser/magnifier mount I got from Wilcox at a trade show last year. I knocked out the firing pin safety the day I got it so I could use a standard Geissele trigger without needing a custom hammer. It’s had the same Sierra Precision SPR grip, LMT stock, and Surefire Mini-Scout all along I think. It’s had a Surefire FH-212A flash hider so I could run the corresponding suppressor on it. The optic has been an Eotech XPS, or the Aimpoint I used whenever the Eotech was back being serviced under warranty (a few times, unfortunately). It’s a boat anchor, too. I don’t remember what it weighs, but with all this crap on it and the older heavy barrel contour, it’s somewhere in the range of my SR-25…

Do You Love Matt's Mom?

Today, I’d be lying if I told you the barrel was in good shape. It’s a solid 4 MOA with 77GR MK262 now, and is experiencing some velocity loss. The accuracy is still within acceptable margins I guess, but compared to the 1 MOA I was getting at the beginning of its life that’s a sizable loss. More unsettling is the velocity loss, but that’s just the name of the game with a very shot-out barrel. It also doesn’t like to run suppressed any longer over the last 500 rounds. I haven’t even bothered to diagnose that one; I’m just chalking that up to being worn out. That might be a good problem to solve on a rainy Saturday in the future. The gun went 17,000 unsuppressed rounds between cleanings, although I lube it like I would a DI gun. Moving metal is moving metal, after all. Cleanings came more frequently as I shot suppressed, blowback from the can made the gun plenty dirty, even with the benefits of the piston keeping fouling out of the breech. I think you can regularly neglect a DI gun as well, as long as it’s well-and frequently-lubed, but the ability to leave the gun alone and just shoot it was a confidence builder all the same. While it was not perfect, I would say I had less than 20 malfunctions with this gun. I can attribute all of them to cheap frangible ammo at one particular event or firing with the can attached in the last 500 rounds. Anything related to the gun isn’t coming to mind right now. A special message to everyone worried about carrier tilt: I am sorry to report my gun did NOT wear a new hole in itself, and you’ll have to fabricate a new fatal flaw in the system.

I’m pretty attached to this rifle, and I’m sad to be shelving it. Seeing how badly I could treat this gun and how long it would last with no parts replacements until necessary has been a long-term project, and gun the gun outlasted my willingness to abuse it. The rifle won the battle of the wills. Sure, it’s expensive and heavy, but I’ll be damned if I could find a way to make it not work within its life cycle…3.35 times in a row. Well played, German engineering well played.

“The highest quality steel is used in this unique manufacturing process producing a barrel that provides superior accuracy for greater than 20,000 rounds with minimal degradation of accuracy and muzzle velocity.”
–HK USA

Summary:
HK416 10” upper, LMT registered SBR lower
67,000 rounds
1 MOA thru at least 20K rounds, 4 MOA at 67K. I didn’t bench it up very often…
<20 malfunctions, none attributable to the gun itself 400+ hours of arguing the piston-wonder-gun’s virtues, on the internet. 4000+ hours of reading how SOF was dumping it since 2006, on the internet. How’d that work out?

Legion Firearms Presents One Heck Of A Deal

Tuesday, March 26th, 2013

Legion Firearms just sent us this press release. Magazine prices have recently gone up so several vendors are offering special deals in order to soften the blow, but nobody has done anything like this!

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AUSTIN, TX—28 FEB, 2013—Legion Firearms® is pleased to announce an epic rifle purchasing opportunity. This may well be the sale of the century. Buy one MagPul PMAG during the month of March and receive a free rifle!

That’s right. Legion is channeling the mainstream hype generated in response to nation-wide efforts on the part of unscrupulous legislators to offer you a PMAG GEN M3 from MagPul for the low low price of just $2,400.00. Twenty-four hundred dollars gets you a (probably) brand spanking new standard 30-round capacity polymer magazine and an LF4 ODG 5.56mm rifle at no additional charge.

Yes, it’s true. Thanks to such nauseating examples of elected officialdom as Rhonda Fields, Felix Ortiz, Audrey Gibson, Antonio Villaraigosa and of course Diane Feinstein, the market value of rifle magazines is now roughly on par with movie theater refreshments and extra sour cream from taco chains…but we’re offering an LF4 alongside our magazines to take the sting out.

The LF4 ODG leverages a combination of the quality construction standards and experience of Legion Firearms with the tactical acumen and innovation of Orion Design Group founder Brian Bishop to create a rugged, well equipped combat rifle unlike any other in the market—and it features the Lupus Camouflage Pattern!

Noted firearms tactician and Orion Design Group founder Brian Bishop has become a valuable asset to the Legion Firearms team. His innovative approach to weapon systems and concealment technology are brought to bear in every product he designs. Legion is proud to partner with ODG to present this “tricked out” yet “no nonsense” combat rifle featuring the Lupus Camouflage pattern. The LF4ODG normally retails for $2,490.00. You get yours for free with purchase of $2,400 magazine and coupon code LEGIOXXX.

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Features:
• forged 7075-T6 aluminum upper and lower
• Nickel-Boron coated upper, lower, and bolt carrier group
• Geissele MK1 Super Mod hand guard
• 14.5” HEX fluted 416 stainless steel barrel
• adjustable gas block
• SureFire muzzle break
• ambidextrous Legion Raptor charging handle
• ambidextrous safety selector
• Geissele SSA trigger
• MagPul MOE grip and CTR stock
• ODG Tactical Sling
• ODG Lupus Camo ink transfer
• ODG Tactical Sling
• ODG Lupus Camo ink transfer
• Ships in high quality Flambeau case
• Shipping restrictions may apply

Limit 10 per customer.

www.legionfirearms.com