User Panel
I'm tempermental. 5% temper, the rest is mental.
FL, USA
|
Posted: 1/23/2007 8:13:22 PM EST
I'm buying one soon. What's your experience with yours? Good reliable gun?
|
"Try not to think about dying, that might make you nervous."
|
mine goes bang everytime..
Just keep a good buffer in it and you will be good to go.. |
|
If it will get your teeth knocked out in real life, you'll get banned for it.
HK_SHOOTER_03 |
hello. mine has had litterally thousands of rounds through it! runs all day without any problems. if the gun your looking at hasnt been converted to sten mags, make sure you get it converted. absolutely the best money you can spend on it. i have well over 100 mags for mine, and i can think of only 2 mags that ever gave me problems. you will eventually wear out the sear and the sear trip, so it wont fire semi-auto. who cares! you dont need semi on a mac-11. you will want to get extra cocking knobs because they like to break. i finally made one out of solid steel, and havent had any problems with it. make sure you get a can for it also. kirk
|
|
|
Ditto. I have an M10/45, and am very happy with the GemTech Viper. They make a model for 9mm also. Nice thing about the Viper is it has a locking collar so it doesn't accidentally come unscrewed. |
||
Isaiah 16:11 "Wherefore my bowels shall sound like an harp..."
thebeekeeper1: "We don't allow any kind of generalized bashing--except against the French." Be polite. Be professional. But have a plan to kill everyone you meet. |
I'm tempermental. 5% temper, the rest is mental.
FL, USA
|
Those big ass threads on the bbl, can you get an adapter so you can use the same can on a 9mm pistol? |
||
"Try not to think about dying, that might make you nervous."
|
hello. yes, mark tross makes an asapter for it. www.trosusa.com.
|
|
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
I like M11's -- they are a hoot to shoot, and the cheapest way to full-auto. But the QC of factory parts and components is miles below that of an Uzi or M16. I swear the Cobray parts musta been pounded outa old nails and rusty rails by trolls living under bridges. I hope your new toy is reliable; if not, just buy quality aftermarket upgrades, and don't look back.
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
Are you refering to small upgraded internals and FCG parts, or add ons like the Lage/Stoney Creek uppers? Can you point another soon to be M11 owner in the direction of quality aftermarket upgrades? |
||
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
The weak points are bolts, sears, disconnectors, and to a lesser degree small parts like knobs, pins and springs. The reason there are so many transferable M11/9's is that when the manufacturing ban surfaced in Congress, Cobray started cranking them out 24/7 to make as many as possible before the May 19, 1986 cutoff. There are about 30k in the Registry, and IIRC at least half of those were built in the last eight weeks. Cobray did not have nearly enough parts in hand, so they put a rush order through subcontractors ... and got a lot of subpar quality components -- pretty much everything except the welded receiver itself, the magwells, upper-receiver housings. Remember, it was a $150 retail gun at the time and normal (non-rush) quality wasn't that high; add in sub-Q parts and you can see the potential for problems. You can tell when yours was made by the serial number -- the first two numbers are the year of production, so the following applies to "86-" SN M11's: --First, check the welds on the rear of your receiver, where the flat is folded up and welded on the sides. A significant number (maybe 5-10%) of "rush" guns had poor welds. Check used guns for cracks, and keep an eye on NIB examples when you first shoot them. Cracks are easy to fix if noticed asap; if ignored, the rear can bend or even let go. Usually if the first 500 rounds are fine, your welds will hold forever. (Just never, ever fire an M11 with an age-deteriorated buffer, or no buffer at all.) --Bolts and sears made in the rush were not sufficiently hardened. Some of the '86 M11s had old-stock, correctly hardened components; as many as half did not. They were drawn out of inventory at random, so you can't judge by the SN. Soft metal will wear away fast, and after as little as a coupla hundred rounds you can have runaways -- you get a mag dump every time you touch the trigger. It's best just to keep it aimed downrange and let it run out, but it can be intimidating to a newbie (I let a friend's wife shoot my M11 as her first full-auto experience, and she had a runaway the first time she pulled the trigger. "Was it supposed to do that?" she asked.) The problem is that a lot of those 1986-rush soft-metal bolts are still in inventory today, so a factory replacement bolt purchased today may go bad just as fast. I finally took all my "rounded" bolts to my machining genius, who rewelded them, recut the notches, and once fixed they have never worn again. I can't recall what metal he used, offhand, but if someone needs to know I'll ask him. Sears are the same -- soft metal that rounds off, allowing runaways. I've got a whole bag of worn-out examples of 'em. Some of the improved aftermarket ones are supposed to be better, but I don't have enough experience to recommend anyone. IMHO, it'd be worth having a good welder redo these as well. --Disconnectors are stamped steel, and many are so out-of-spec that they bounce into the "stop" position while firing, and turn full-auto into an unplanned burst-only SMG. The easiest thing to do is just pull them out -- an M11 will run fine without 'em, you'll just have safe/FA with no semi function. Who shoots an M11 in semi anyway? I don't know of anyone making improved disconnectors. --Factory top-cockers like to break the cocking knob and bounce it off your forehead at 1,000 rpm. Again, it's a combo of soft metal and poor machining tolerances. Personally, I will not shoot a M11 without a sidecock upper of some sort. --Keep an eye on misc pins and springs. Fer instance, the retaining pin that holds in the stock catch likes to break, which will allow your stock to slide out and fall off the gun. It won't happen while you are shooting -- the recoil keeps it in -- but it gets embarrassing to have your $3k toy fall apart when you are showing it to friends. Some of the aftermarket stocks do not use the factory catch, so I vote for those as a better alternative. Now, the odds are against all of the above happening to a single M11/9. But each is common enough that they are worth anticipating if you own one. As far as aftermarket parts ... I have heard nothing but praise for Lage products from shooters whose opinions and experience I highly respect, so I would recommend anything Richard makes. For stuff he doesn't make ... well, you prolly won't have a problem, and if you do, there is little that can't be fixed in minutes by a talented welder, if you keep the above in mind. Modified M11's are winning subgun matches everywhere these days -- they have incredible potential. Just remember that they are product-improved examples, like race cars, and the winning shooters train like race-car drivers. Don't expect to run a box-stock M11/9 against them and win, or even finish the race. Flame suit on.... |
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
Tony - thanks for a comprehensive, well written response. Couple of questions, inserted into quotes from you:
The one I have on the way is an 85-something-I-cant-recall . While I realise that you've stated its important to check for the following problems regardless of they year, does the fact that it wasn't a "rush" gun mean that they are SIGNIFICANTLY less likely? Out of curiousity, is there any way to date the gun by the rest of the SN?
Why never fire it with a buffer - the receiver will bend? I bought a used gun - is/was it a common practice to fire them without buffers? Should I be concerned about abuse from the previous owner?
Correct me if I'm wrong about this, but the registered part is the receiver? So if one is not friends with a welder genius type character, they could just purchase a new bolt/sear and drop it in? Any need for some type of headspacing?
I started another thread about replacing the factory stock - so far the choices I've seen have been the Lage fixed/sidefolder, the mini Uzi sidefolder conversion, and the Stoney Creek sidefolder. I also understand there is an Ares underfolder conversion out there, but havent been able to find an image of that. Can you chime in about any experiences you may have had with these? As you stated earlier, I've heard nothing but praise about ALL the Lage products, and I'm leaning that way, but in the other thread the Uzi conversion was highly recommended. Once again, thanks for your time, and I hope captainpooby doesnt mind the thread hijack too much |
|||||
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
|
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
Buffer Technologies sells buffers, these seem to be what came with the Max-11
Tactical Innovations sells buffers Cobray sells buffers I have ordered buffers from all. will probably use buffer tech exclusively once I shoot up all the ones I have. When you order, buy a bunch, leave the extras in your shooting bag. |
|
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
ARES only did one large production run long ago ('98? '99? 00? Somewhere in there). They weren't cheap -- about $200 each -- but they were the only aftermarket stock available back then. I don't know anyone who still has them in stock, but they show up on the boards now and then. Here are pix of it, open and closed: |
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
I'm another satisfied M11/9 owner. Another part to upgrade or keep spares on hand is the selector lever.
|
|
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
On rereading my sorta harsh posts above ... I need to repeat that M11/9's are great SMGs. You do need to have buffers and spare parts on hand, and watch for wear. But I'm not trying to scare anyone off, just make them aware of the flaws.
I'll admit that I'm biased by my experience with Uzis, particularly Vectors, which seem to be able to run for years and tens of k's of rounds with out a single FTF, FTE or even one part breaking; they'll even run without any cleaning beyond wiping off the crud. So that's what I think of when I hear the term "reliable" applied to MGs. IMHO, beyond the Uzi exception, no transferable MG is plug-and-play. M11/9's are half the cost, upgrades make 'em competitive with anything out there, parts are cheap and everywhere, and they are easier to work on than semi ARs. Keep the potential problems (and neccesary spare parts) I listed above in mind and you'll find an M11 is still the most fun you can have with your pants on. |
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
Spoke with my dealer regarding this question, and he couldnt answer it, so I'll post it here:
Approximately how often does one need to change the buffer, in terms of round count, or elapsed time? Tony, got any pictures of what a "bad", or worn out buffer looks like, so us newbies know what to watch out for? Thanks again for all your help. |
|
|
+1 for satisfied Viper owner. ETA, Tony's post about M11 failures is the best I've ever read and mirrors my experiences with two '86 made M11s. |
|||
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
Sorry, I don't have photos. Some tips: --Factory buffers are black with a matte surface, and a rubber appearance. With age (20 years sitting installed in an NIB gun) they deteriorate inside -- they still look "new" but will literally crumble into particles with the first bolt impact. Even new replacements don't last long -- they generally will last up to 800 or 1k rounds; with hot ammo and a suppressor, they may start to split, deform or break apart after as little as 400-500 rounds. --Most aftermarket buffers are made of one of two plastic-appearing materials, a softer translucent (usually yellowish) in several different thicknesses or an opaque bright red that is harder. I've never seen one of these crumble; instead, they start to show impact marks from the bolt, and eventually will start to thin out from continued compression. I've seen them split but never crumble. I would expect them to last a loooong time in a slow-fire M11; even in a suppressed standard-upper with hot ammo they should be fine for 2k-3k. --There's also the MacJack, a honkin' big block of hard white plastic. On a suppressed M11/9 they can get your ROF up to 2,000 rpm, but I've never seen one deform or break -- the material is too hard to wear out. Remember, the function of a buffer it to keep it from hitting the metal rear of the receiver. It's a $5-$10 part to save you a trip to the welder, or worse. Buy a bunch and when in doubt, throw it out. HTH. |
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
Does ramping up the ROF so high cause any additional wear on the other parts? That sounds fun... PS: Heres 1 vote for turning all this good info into a tacked MAC FAQ. This is/was incredibly helpful. |
||
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
Shooting suppressed with warm ammo, my MacJacked M11 would empty a 50-round Lanchester mag in 1.5 seconds. If your M11 has any of the soft-metal or weak-weld issues ... well, they will surface a []lot faster with a MacJack. Otherwise, the amount of wear is more closely related to round count than speed. BTW, Tactical Innovations (see above buffer link) makes the original MacJack; $22.49. |
||
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
So whats the deal with ammo selection for a M11 - I read on some board that its unwise to shoot +P, +P+ or that super +P+ IMI ammo as it will also unpleasantly wear on the parts. Will higher pressure ammo adversely wear on my mac? Also, I read that HP ammo essentially wont feed - that tend to be true? Anyone make a beta(or larger then a Suomi drum) mag that'll fit a Mac yet, or is that a DIY project |
||
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
I would not shoot +P or +P+ ammo in an M11/9. They are designed for the standard 9mm round, a relatively low pressure round by today's standards -- it was developed in 1902. +P and +P+ rounds can develop 25-30+% more chamber pressure than the original 9mm loading. Next, check the diameter of an M11/'s barrel around the chamber, and remember that it was designed for a gun that retailed for $150, with a production cost to Cobray of less than $50 per complete gun. Also remember what I said above about production standards. In other words ... putting high-pressure loads in an M11 is like pulling the pin on a grenade, then holding it up near your face. re: HP ammo -- The M11, like all subguns, was designed as a military weapon for use with ball ammo. Hollowpoints never feed as well as round nose in any firearm from a purely functional viewpoint; that's doubly true for a military design. Given the higher cost of HP ammo, why worry about whether your M11/9 feeds it anyway? re: large-cap mags -- I like STEn conversions because you can use 50-round Lanchester mags. If you use STEn or non-STEn metal mags, it's easy weld a couple together to get a 55-60 round mag. I've seen Suomi drum conversions that run with varying degrees of reliability. There also are Beta-mag adapters out there. I have no experience with drums with my M11 so I can't speak to them; 50-round Lanchesters do run well IMHO, as do some of the weld-two-into-one metal mags conversions. Bustoff over at subguns.com and Uzitalk.com has a good rep for such welding projects, or you can do it yourself. |
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
In subgun configuration it's a very reliable platform. The weak link is the magazines; factory mags were "disposable" Zytels. Eventually the feed lips will wear down, or the rear seam will split. You can eliminate the wear problem with aftermarket metal feedlips, and the split can be repaired with epoxy, but the mags are fundamentally weak. I went over to converted Argie metal mags and haven't looked back.
As for the rest of the gun, it is cheaply made, with many internals being of low-grade materials (the safety slide comes to mind particularly). Heat treating on factory original parts was a big problem, particularly in '86 when they were making them as fast as they could. Some also had dodgy welds. However, none of this is a problem to fix - there are high-grade aftermarket internals, and several Macsmiths can weld up a gun in the unlikely event that this is necessary. The biggest weakness is the high rate of fire. While 1300rpm sounds like fun, it is almost uncontrollable and wastes ammo at an alarming rate. I bought my M11/9 as a platform for a competition gun, and went into the deal with my eyes open to the above deficiencies. As soon as I got it, I replaced all the internals with quality aftermarket parts, and I installed a Lage MAX-11 slowfire upper and folding stock; now the ROF is a very manageable 650rpm. Here are some pics: This gun is simply AWESOME, and I would (in a competitive situation) put it up against any other submachinegun in the world at any price - including the Uzi, the MP5 and the M16-9. So despite my comments above, I highly encourage you to buy one of these now - they are the last good deal in the transferrable machinegun world, especially with the aftermarket parts available these days. |
|
|
This video is 32 rounds being fired from an otherwise unmodified M11/9 with a Macjack. Ammo is 147 gr subsonic. The echo lasts longer than the actual shots. |
|||
Insanity in individuals is rare, but in groups, parties, and nations it is the rule. -- Nietzsche
|
|
Thanks Tony K, this is just what I've been looking for.
|
|
|
|
|
Myakka City, Florida.
|
I took the plunge and bought one recently. Who is the best source for Sten mag conversion and how much should I expect to pay?
|
|
"It's called 'peer pressure' and if applied in a swift kick to his 'nads, it works wonders!"
-Eric The (We Miss You) Hun |
proud member of PETA:People for the Eating of Tastey Animals.
|
Bruh44... whose flashhider do you have on there ?
|
|
|
It's an Ameetec Arms, that I had Phil at PF Custom drill out so it would work for a 9mm.
|
|
proud member of PETA:People for the Eating of Tastey Animals.
|
My first NFA was/is a M-11/9. Mine didn't run so good at first, and I eventually figured out that it had trouble ejecting for a couple of reasons. One was that over time, the stock ejector rod bends slightly, and also mushrooms at the tip. If you clean up the tip and resquare it, that will get the empty pointing the right direction, out the ejection port. Also straighten out the ejector rod, get it as straight as possible. This isn't so hard cause the stock one is made of a soft metal. The next thing I had to do was enlarge the front of the ejection port by about .030". It was obvious that the empties had been hitting the inside of the port, cause they had actually bowed the upper receiver out just a little over time. I just put the stripped upper in a mill and made one cut. It went from running 95% to 100% with those 2 modifications.
|
|
|
I posted two different posts cause they address different needs.
Now that I have my M-11/9 running 100%, it decided to give me different grief. Now it is running away, and the bolt and sear appear to have worn. Can someone post a pic or 2 showing a new, or near new, bolt and sear? Specifically the areas where they contact? I am thinking of having at least the bolt welded up and that area hardened, but I do not know how much mine has worn down. Thanks! |
|
|
2-08-07....APPROVED!
The wait for the forms to get back to my dealer is infinitely longer then the wait for the ATF to approve them. Pics coming! |
|
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
I don't have pix, but these are not precision instruments -- you shouldn't need dimensions. The contact points on both the sear and bolt are straight angles, and they round off at the points. So you can just look at the base of the notch and weld it up until it makes a square angle. My guy used mild steel welding rod, 307s (er70ws), then filed to shape. We held off on hardening to see how it would last, and it never rounded off again, so I'm not sure hardening is really neccessary. |
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
How was I to know she was with the Russians, too?
FL, USA
|
Congrats! Now start/keep buying mags and ammo -- no matter how much you have, you'll need triple that! |
|
This is Tony K, and I approved this message.
|
Here is a close up of my M11/9 sear. This is an aftermarket part from WGA: The factory original rounded off - didn't get bad enough to run away, but I changed it out just in case. I've been very happy with the WGA parts I bought, though some others have reported dimensional and hardness issues with these parts too. Welding and reprofiling would work, but if I were you I'd look at the "monster sear" from Stoney Creek. |
||
|
I think I remember hearing that the monster sear was full-auto only. I think it takes away the ability to go semi.
|
|
proud member of PETA:People for the Eating of Tastey Animals.
|
Found some more pics here: www.mac-11.net/
From the pics on the above site it appears my bolt may be ok. Comparing my sear to the pics above it looks as if the sear is the culprit. I'll check out the WGA sear. Cobray FA sears are $40, thats not too bad, but I imagine it will wear out again. Thanks guys for the help! |
|
|
Correct - the current monster sear is designed specifically for the Stoney Creek Suomi upper (which is full-auto only). They are supposedly working on a select-fire version of the sear which will be available "soon". |
||
|
This site may help you out too: uzitalk/mac10
|
|
proud member of PETA:People for the Eating of Tastey Animals.
|
|
I had no problems until 10k plus rounds! I ordered a lage upper and it will be here next week. It will be a new gun and does not look all jerry rigged up. I use zytels and recons. Zytels are great until they are not. They will spread and ammo will pop out while cyling. This can cause a double feed and a kaboom at 1200 RPM. I have replace my sear and it is nearly due again. My trigger spring is weak and I tweaked it, a new one is on order.
|
|
|
Mine runs marginally with a macjack, just fine without it. My zytels are the problem, I believe. I'm trying to find better mags, or perhaps going to consider a sten conversion.
|
|
Originally posted by swingset:
Cost a pretty penny to become the manly SOB I am now, but gosh how I miss being able to fit into a size 3 cheerleader outfit. |
I was pretty close to getting the sten conversion myself until I posted on uzitalk, and got this back: uzitalk |
||
Yep, I'm as smart as a horse, and hung like Einstein.
|
That thread didn't mention two of my major beefs with the sten mag conversion - the grip is enlarged (which is a big deal to me with my smaller hands, far less confortable) and - the OEM stock or anything used the full length rails, cannot be retracted with a magazine in place. If your hands are normal to large and you don't use the cheesy OEM stock, neither will matter I suppose.
|
|
Visit the ALASKA FORUM on ARF at http://www.ar15.com/forums/forum.html?b=8&f=43
"This topic obviously hit a nerve among the folks out there. No one has uttered the esteemed Arfcom cheer: Get both." - Amicus |
I had a M11/9 cobray it was a DANGEROUS POS! Got it NIB for $600.00 shot it 6 times. Some times in would do a 3-5 round bust in semi, some times it would even run a whole mag in full auto and some times it even would go off all by its self! I let one other person who was very experinced shoot it once to try and figure out what was wrong with it, when I handed it to him "empty of course" I told him to hold it like a rattle snake because in my opinon it was just as dangerous. I replaced all of the internals and it then seemed ok but I still sold it to a dealer and was glad to be rid of in before someone got hurt of worse.....
|
|
|
If you replaced the internals and still had the problem then it was most likely the bolt that was the problem. I've had mine for a month now and absolutely love it.!!!!!! |
||
"It's called 'peer pressure' and if applied in a swift kick to his 'nads, it works wonders!"
-Eric The (We Miss You) Hun |
I should have never clicked this....
Is there major quality difference between LAGE and Stony Creek. I'm kinda partial to LAGE as it stands now. |
|
"The only difference between an ass kisser and a brown noser is depth perception"
Every one has a photographic memory. Some just don't have film. |
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.