Of course, this could be a good excuse for a FAL or HK91 pattern rifle...
Of course, this could be a good excuse for a FAL or HK91 pattern rifle...
"You win 100% of the fights you avoid. If you're not there when it happens, you don't lose." - William Aprill
"I've owned a guitar for 31 years and that sure hasn't made me a musician, let alone an expert. It's made me a guy who owns a guitar."- BBI
I feel like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders ... I am a very deep thinker in regard to self-defense and physical fitness.
Thanks to all ... very much appreciated!
A .308 battle rifle is already a marginal concept.
Why add an obsolescent pattern weapon which is inferior to a modern AR-10. Both of the AR-10s the OP mentioned are just as reliable as a G3 or FAL clone, with better mechanical accuracy, a better trigger, better optics mounting options better options for mounting enablers like lights and lasers and don’t involve a different manual of arms.
"You win 100% of the fights you avoid. If you're not there when it happens, you don't lose." - William Aprill
"I've owned a guitar for 31 years and that sure hasn't made me a musician, let alone an expert. It's made me a guy who owns a guitar."- BBI
Ken
BBI: ...”you better not forget the safe word because shit's about to get weird”...
revchuck38: ...”mo' ammo is mo' betta' unless you're swimming or on fire.”
Two things I haven't seen mentioned that are also demerits for the large frame is the issue of pickiness with ammo and the ability to self-trace.
In my circle of friends, it seems like the large frame ARs tend to be much pickier with ammo than AR-15s. For example, my SR-25 does fine with Federal Gold Medal (1 MOA), but not very well with most bonded rounds (Gold Dot, Fusion, AccuBond, etc. are typically 2 to 3 MOA), and absolutely hates normal ball ammo (6 to 8 MOA). One of my friends can't get his home-brew to group worth a shit even with factory match ammo (haven't played too much with handloads), though his home assembled AR-15s are all just fine.
Then there's the fact that the larger amount of recoil of the large frame makes it much harder to self-trace (watching your bullet/splash through your own optic) and thus self-correct. With my SR-25, using an ATACR 1-8× at full power, I am unable to self-trace consistently within 200 yards, even when prone using a pack as a rest and in a stable position utilizing natural point of aim, both with a full-sized suppressor (SOCOM762-RC) and a brake (SureFire 2 chamber), and thus would need a spotter to tell me what corrections I would need to do. With my AR-15 with a Kahles k16i at full power, I have zero issues self-tracing at essentially any distance, when prone and in a stable position.
My SR25 only has issues with particularly weak ammo. But that is to be expected given the rifle's operating parameters were around suppressed use IIRC. As for recoil, mine isnt bad at all, less than my SCAR17 which is very good too. Accuracy is excellent. Reliability has been fantastic. Mine is an earlier SR25 EMC for reference. I find it to be entirely my most versatile rifle. I can practically run it like an M4 as well as extend out to 800 yds or more. Now as for 5.56 vs 308 for SD, I seem to remember Dr. Roberts posting here on PF that he would choose the 308?
200 yds seems like an awfully short distance for trying to pick up trace?
Nothing here particularly new but backs up pretty much everything that has been said:
https://www.everydaymarksman.co/podc...-basic-armory/
My AR10 has been a great rifle and I like it very much. Been completely reliable for me and more than accurate. But it is heavy and proprietary. It does have a place in my "Scenario X" planning being a SAPR for point defense and support (I have a lot of open area) during a bug in, but if I would ever need to go mobile it would be left behind. Being a "Gun Nerd" with a collection I have to keep discipline between my "Serious Guns" and my "Toys/Collectables." While there can be some overlap I really don't see me defending the home with a SVT-42....
I think a .308 rifle can make a good addition to many people's "plans", but it is a secondary support role to be filled only after the primary needs are met.