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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg View Quote |
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Something about the carbine version speaks to me. Like it's screams post-apocalypse assault rifle. http://ar180s.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/B06DA21B-634F-4D89-A58A-22C7557945A8-1024x768.jpeg View Quote |
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Look at how MarColMar is doing the Cetme L's and LC's and do it that way. All original features, with fantastic quality, and a low profile optional rail for optics...perfect. Do it right and it could probably find it's way in among these guys... https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/84523/20190828_174220_jpg-1218740.JPG https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/84523/20190424_115020_jpg-1218738.JPG View Quote |
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I have a B. Gotta remember to buy one of spuds, receivers. Mine is set up with the sormworks hinge and folds. I'd buy another if they had a rail. My MI mount was shit and so no optic mounted on mine. It would be real simple to make a version that utilized AR barrels and hand guards. Steel or Aluminum lower. Ar mags. How about an AR18? That was 308 size right? That would rock. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg |
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg View Quote |
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Only if it:
- has a folding stock - takes AR mags - costs less than $1000 |
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I think the upper from the AR180B would be fine - just change the lower to Aluminum and add a good folding mechanism.
I would hope they can keep the cost down. That was the whole point of the way that gun was made originally. I always wondered if somebody else made those stamped steel AR180B uppers for them??? |
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I think the upper from the AR180B would be fine - just change the lower to Aluminum and add a good folding mechanism. I would hope they can keep the cost down. That was the whole point of the way that gun was made originally. I always wondered if somebody else made those stamped steel AR180B uppers for them??? View Quote The problem with the ones available now are 98% of them are in 1994 ban config. The bolt is also not chromed like the AR-180. I am telling you the AR-180B is a great rifle when modified with a NDS-18S lower and folding adapter. Do not pass on one for sale if you see one at $700-$900. They can be had for that price. At least 3 this last year on GB. |
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It is a rendering of a Solidworks model I did of the AR16 from the original drawings. The original drawings are a mess and I am getting them straightened out to produce a semi copy of the AR16. The project is still a couple of years off due to the amount of stampings involved in the gun. https://i.imgur.com/aCOQIVF.jpg https://i.imgur.com/qXG1m5E.jpg https://i.imgur.com/JOfVk3b.jpg https://i.imgur.com/0K4HfVW.jpg View Quote |
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Tell Chuck to finish that VG1-5 and git a move on................. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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It is a rendering of a Solidworks model I did of the AR16 from the original drawings. The original drawings are a mess and I am getting them straightened out to produce a semi copy of the AR16. The project is still a couple of years off due to the amount of stampings involved in the gun. https://i.imgur.com/aCOQIVF.jpg https://i.imgur.com/qXG1m5E.jpg https://i.imgur.com/JOfVk3b.jpg https://i.imgur.com/0K4HfVW.jpg |
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I only want one on the one day a year everyone pretends to be Irish.
Irish Rebel Songs - My Little Armalite (lyrics) |
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At the right price and Stanag compatible I would definitely pick one up.
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Depends on how they planning to do a backwards compatibility with the original and B series.
Then it depends on BigRix is going crazy with more projects. |
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That's what this thread is about. AR-180s are mostly nostalgia. No one buys one because they think it is better for fighting than an AR-15. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You put lipstick on your guns, too? I don't understand why anyone cares about a gun's aesthetics. It's a fucking tool with one job: To kill shit. The AR-18 proper may not have caught on, but its operating mechanisms definitely did. An updated AR-18/AR-180 would probably do just fine as a fighting gun. At this point, I don't see any way they can do the stampings without incurring costs that will make these have a huge price tag (and I don't think the demand is there for the volume to change that). Machining the parts that were originally stamped (and perhaps out of aluminum as much as possible), but otherwise keeping everything else in-spec/interchangeable as much as possible with the originals would be the best way to go about it and keep the costs reasonable, I'd thing. A modernized one might use a different folding stock mechanism (and perhaps a better folding stock design, as well), AR-15 magazine catch (and maybe FCG, too), rail on top instead of the proprietary scope mount, and incorporation of some modularity into the design, including some way to attach FF railed handguards and such. |
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Hmmm, color me intrigued. A commercial AR-16 was something I never thought would exist. Looks like 2020 might be cool for the gun collection and hard on the wallet! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. |
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Quoted: The irony in this statement is just how many modern firearms use the AR-18 mechanism and are essentially AR-18s with a different external appearance. The AR-18 proper may not have caught on, but its operating mechanisms definitely did. An updated AR-18/AR-180 would probably do just fine as a fighting gun. At this point, I don't see any way they can do the stampings without incurring costs that will make these have a huge price tag (and I don't think the demand is there for the volume to change that). Machining the parts that were originally stamped (and perhaps out of aluminum as much as possible), but otherwise keeping everything else in-spec/interchangeable as much as possible with the originals would be the best way to go about it and keep the costs reasonable, I'd thing. A modernized one might use a different folding stock mechanism (and perhaps a better folding stock design, as well), AR-15 magazine catch (and maybe FCG, too), rail on top instead of the proprietary scope mount, and incorporation of some modularity into the design, including some way to attach FF railed handguards and such. View Quote |
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Quoted: The irony in this statement is just how many modern firearms use the AR-18 mechanism and are essentially AR-18s with a different external appearance. The AR-18 proper may not have caught on, but its operating mechanisms definitely did. An updated AR-18/AR-180 would probably do just fine as a fighting gun. At this point, I don't see any way they can do the stampings without incurring costs that will make these have a huge price tag (and I don't think the demand is there for the volume to change that). Machining the parts that were originally stamped (and perhaps out of aluminum as much as possible), but otherwise keeping everything else in-spec/interchangeable as much as possible with the originals would be the best way to go about it and keep the costs reasonable, I'd thing. A modernized one might use a different folding stock mechanism (and perhaps a better folding stock design, as well), AR-15 magazine catch (and maybe FCG, too), rail on top instead of the proprietary scope mount, and incorporation of some modularity into the design, including some way to attach FF railed handguards and such. But ultimately, I'd rather have just a modernized AR-180 over an adaptation to the AR-15 platform that uses the basic AR-18 operating mechanism. |
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It'd be neat for sure. Stoner seemed to have a thing for 7.62mm rifles and a preference for developing them. AR-10/AR-16/Stoner-62/SR-25. The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. |
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. |
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.30 is 7.62mm. But anyways, the rifles he developed were in 7.62mm NATO, which in its military load is roughly equivalent to .30-06. From what I understand he's never been that fond of intermediate cartridges. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. “Stoner joining ArmaLite coincided with his development of what he called the M-8, an “autorifle” that subsequently became known as the X-01, chambered in .30-06, not the new .308 T65 round then in development. This was Stoner’s first step toward the AR-10. While the X-01 differed massively from the later AR-10s, it featured the in-line profile, rotating bolt and direct gas impingement system which would remain fundamental throughout the development of Stoner’s Rifle. The X-01 was made from stamped steel and had wooden furniture, not the forged aluminium and plastic composite that later rifles would make use of, but despite this it still weighed just under 8 lbs., respectable for a .30-06 rifle, and substantially lighter than an M1 Garand.” |
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Milling is going to add $$$
Kinda against the 180 thought line . And not necessary . I have an Ar180B and love it . I put a red dot on it and it is one of my go to rifles |
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“Stoner joining ArmaLite coincided with his development of what he called the M-8, an “autorifle” that subsequently became known as the X-01, chambered in .30-06, not the new .308 T65 round then in development. This was Stoner’s first step toward the AR-10. While the X-01 differed massively from the later AR-10s, it featured the in-line profile, rotating bolt and direct gas impingement system which would remain fundamental throughout the development of Stoner’s Rifle. The X-01 was made from stamped steel and had wooden furniture, not the forged aluminium and plastic composite that later rifles would make use of, but despite this it still weighed just under 8 lbs., respectable for a .30-06 rifle, and substantially lighter than an M1 Garand.” View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. “Stoner joining ArmaLite coincided with his development of what he called the M-8, an “autorifle” that subsequently became known as the X-01, chambered in .30-06, not the new .308 T65 round then in development. This was Stoner’s first step toward the AR-10. While the X-01 differed massively from the later AR-10s, it featured the in-line profile, rotating bolt and direct gas impingement system which would remain fundamental throughout the development of Stoner’s Rifle. The X-01 was made from stamped steel and had wooden furniture, not the forged aluminium and plastic composite that later rifles would make use of, but despite this it still weighed just under 8 lbs., respectable for a .30-06 rifle, and substantially lighter than an M1 Garand.” |
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Doesn't really change anything I said. AR-10, AR-16, the 7.62mm Stoners, and the SR-25 were all 7.62X51mm rifles. That at least one prototype leading up to the oldest design before the T65 was adopted was in .30-06 doesn't really make a difference in this context. All of this is beside the point (that he seems to have full-power and .30-cal rather than smaller, intermediate cartridges; I think he may have even made statements to this effect as well). View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg The Stoner 62 and 63 in their commercial guises (I forget; I think they may have had their own numerical designations, 66 and 67, maybe) or a return of the real AR-10 would be pretty neat, too. Not sure there's enough of a market to make any of that worthwhile. “Stoner joining ArmaLite coincided with his development of what he called the M-8, an “autorifle” that subsequently became known as the X-01, chambered in .30-06, not the new .308 T65 round then in development. This was Stoner’s first step toward the AR-10. While the X-01 differed massively from the later AR-10s, it featured the in-line profile, rotating bolt and direct gas impingement system which would remain fundamental throughout the development of Stoner’s Rifle. The X-01 was made from stamped steel and had wooden furniture, not the forged aluminium and plastic composite that later rifles would make use of, but despite this it still weighed just under 8 lbs., respectable for a .30-06 rifle, and substantially lighter than an M1 Garand.” Keep digging! |
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Firearms have advanced since the AR-180. While I like all sorts of retro rifles, it is difficult for manufacturers to make money re-introducing firearms that went out of production years ago. Usually, firearms go out of production because there are advances in firearms design, or other firearms shooters prefer to buy. If a firearm (like the original AR-180) was still making profit for the company, they would probably still be making them. It may not be a wise financial venture to re-introduce a firearm that went out of production because it wasn't selling well. With all that said, I think it is neat when a classic design that has been out of production gets re-introduced. However, the new firearm has to be priced low enough to encourage buyers to spend their money. The re-introduction of the 30-06 caliber, semi-auto only BAR is such a firearm. While they are very cool, they are far too expensive for me to justify spending my limited firearms budget on one. View Quote |
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Quoted: If he pulls that off, he could be looking at a promotion to Lt. Hatred. View Quote I WOULD LOVE AN AR-16. Back to the topic: I owned a VERY early AR-180 from Costa Mesa....selling it was one of the dumbest things I have ever done. The ONLY way Armalite would interest me in this is if it was as close to the original as possible BUT took Stanag mags and had a redesigned bolt hold open with a manual hold open option. THEN I would be in. |
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AR16 - the AR18 was developed from it. Project I'm involved with....... https://i.imgur.com/0GwfLDi.jpg https://i.imgur.com/MXhtsun.jpg View Quote |
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I have wanted one..
Reissue of original and under $1K Otherwise no interest. |
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It's been surpassed by better developments. Given the political climate now is the time to bolster what's already here, not add odd stuff to our collections.
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Not if it's the shitty plastic "B" model. Had one, it was a turd. Molded incorrectly, mags wobbled so bad I had feed issues until I used an epoxy & some creative sanding to get things to seat correctly. The buttstock literally fell off the "nub" it was glued to on the first range trip. I was never so angry at myself for buying a gun as that thing. View Quote Since yours was glued I have to assume that either yours was purchased used or was misrepresented as new. Sorry to hear you had a bad experience with it. |
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All of the 180b models I have handled including the one I owned, the butt stock was retained on the rear receiver "nub" by a socket heat cap screw accessed by opening the butt plate trap door. Since yours was glued I have to assume that either yours was purchased used or was misrepresented as new. Sorry to hear you had a bad experience with it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Not if it's the shitty plastic "B" model. Had one, it was a turd. Molded incorrectly, mags wobbled so bad I had feed issues until I used an epoxy & some creative sanding to get things to seat correctly. The buttstock literally fell off the "nub" it was glued to on the first range trip. I was never so angry at myself for buying a gun as that thing. Since yours was glued I have to assume that either yours was purchased used or was misrepresented as new. Sorry to hear you had a bad experience with it. |
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Nope, brownells beat them to the punch with a product that I like.
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Milling is going to add $$$ Kinda against the 180 thought line . And not necessary . I have an Ar180B and love it . I put a red dot on it and it is one of my go to rifles View Quote lots of initial cost setting up the line to stamp stuff. Machines, dies, welding operations. Once a line is is place they can spit them out at little cost. But getting a line setup is costly. Brownells stated stamping would cost too much. If no dies then milled upper and lower is the cheapest. NDS-18S lower(gray anodized) with Armalite name, logo, and info. Milled upper that is a copy of the 180 upper. Folding stock like the original. Would be nice IF an exact stamped copy of the original was made but i would buy if it was a near copy milled rifel. |
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Not if it's the shitty plastic "B" model. Had one, it was a turd. Molded incorrectly, mags wobbled so bad I had feed issues until I used an epoxy & some creative sanding to get things to seat correctly. The buttstock literally fell off the "nub" it was glued to on the first range trip. I was never so angry at myself for buying a gun as that thing. View Quote |
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If Mark Westrom is still in charge I doubt they will make good decisions on the project. Nothing personal, just looking at his history.
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