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AR15.COM
12/16/2013 6:17:06 PM EDT
Colt?
Is this a colt OEM part?
12/16/2013 6:25:13 PM EDT
[#1]
Looks very enidine to me bug I don't know.
12/17/2013 5:10:19 PM EDT
[#2]
From the LMG (light machine gun) to lower cyclic rate.  Didn't any of those were still sround, parts wise.
12/17/2013 8:22:49 PM EDT
[#3]
Wouldn't the LNG use a rifle length buffer?
12/17/2013 8:25:43 PM EDT
[#4]
12/17/2013 8:27:06 PM EDT
[#5]
12/18/2013 8:17:05 AM EDT
[#6]
This is NOT a LMG buffer, It is a carbine buffer.
Anybody with any correct info? Please Don't guess, I need "right" info.
Thanks.
12/18/2013 8:40:28 AM EDT
[#7]
Yes, that photograph is of a Colt carbine hydraulic buffer.


ETA: I don't know much about them. I remember some of them leaked fluid way back when.  Pretty cool for a retro build. I'm not so sure if I'd put it in my personal SHTF carbine.  Couldn't hurt to give it a try. I wonder if it uses a model specific buffer spring too, as the LMG does.  Hopefully someone else that knows will be by.  They are hard to find. Not a real common item.
12/18/2013 8:52:41 AM EDT
[#8]
Quote History
Quoted:
Yes, that photograph is of a Colt carbine hydraulic buffer.
View Quote


Ok so it is OEM colt, Anymore info?
1/17/2014 2:32:46 AM EDT
[#9]
It's a colt from around 20+ years ago it was used in a model of the 9mm smg that had a hydraulic buffer.
1/17/2014 3:09:21 PM EDT
[#10]
Quoted:
Colt?
Is this a colt OEM part?
View Quote


I don't know about it being Colt, but it sure looks beat up...and a waste of money.
1/18/2014 12:51:24 PM EDT
[#11]
Yes, It's a Colt but they haven't made them in around 20 yrs. they do work well coupled with the right action spring.