I've always heard they were threaded on, but never seen one apart. I would have been a bit confused when it happened for surePretty much my exact thought when the whole barrel assembly turned.
I've always heard they were threaded on, but never seen one apart. I would have been a bit confused when it happened for surePretty much my exact thought when the whole barrel assembly turned.
@NWS I saw a thread from a while back where you said you had a Radical Firearms upper. Still have it? How's it holding up?
I've got my own opinions on the utility of 300blk or lack thereof, but I'm curious what you didn't like about it.No, it was my 300 BLK. It has become my OD Glock 19. I freaking hated 300 BLK.
I've got my own opinions on the utility of 300blk or lack thereof, but I'm curious what you didn't like about it.
it's also difficult to determine the proper hold over when switching from supers to subs, right?For my uses it didn't do anything I couldn't do with a 308 or a 7.62x39 better.
In my opinion it is a great round for shooting people or paper. Not much utility beyond those two targets, both of which I try to avoid shooting at as much as possible.
it's also difficult to determine the proper hold over when switching from supers to subs, right?
I wondered the same thing. However, I installed the original barrel and removed it. It was installed at 35 ft lbs per the rail makers specs. It also removed easily, so at no time had any excessive torque been applied to the barrel extension via the RR. If the barrel extension had been installed correctly at 180-200 ft lbs, it isn't possible to break that torque by trying to remove a flash hider. The extension was literally hand tight. The other reason that I don't think the RR is the cause, is that I've never seen a report of an extension coming loose except in a case of improper nitride process. With a correctly installed extension, you'd shear the alignment pin before coming close to loosening the extension. Additionally, if I had been using a clamshell, the issue would still have occurred as soon as I attempted to remove the muzzle device. It was like there was no torque on the extension at all.Funny guy.
I will say OP, I wonder how much of this issue is caused or at least exasperated by the use of reaction rods.
the design criteria for the 300 were extensive and I think for the most part, they accomplished what they set out to do (or maybe they stole the whisper 300 specs and commercialized it). regardless: it is a 30 caliber round, that approximates the energy of an x39 round when supersonic, is easily suppressed, can chamber and fire a wide range of bullets (~ 110 to 220 grain), requires no other conversion to a 556 AR other than barrel and flash hider, fits 30 rounds in a standard ar mag, and maintains significant energy from shorter than 16" barrels. they never set out to create the perfect hunting round. they also didn't intend to create the cheapest plinking round.For my uses it didn't do anything I couldn't do with a 308 or a 7.62x39 better.
In my opinion it is a great round for shooting people or paper. Not much utility beyond those two targets, both of which I try to avoid shooting at as much as possible.
Good points. The round certainly met the original design criteria. It was designed for go-fast doorkickers to shoot smelly, bearded men in the face and to do it quietly if necessary. I don't really have a need for that capability. I had considered it's usefulness as a hunting Caliber, but if I'm going to hunt with an AR, I think I'd rather just shoot the 6.8 or build up a 16" barreled .308.the design criteria for the 300 were extensive and I think for the most part, they accomplished what they set out to do (or maybe they stole the whisper 300 specs and commercialized it). regardless: it is a 30 caliber round, that approximates the energy of an x39 round when supersonic, is easily suppressed, can chamber and fire a wide range of bullets (~ 110 to 220 grain), requires no other conversion to a 556 AR other than barrel and flash hider, fits 30 rounds in a standard ar mag, and maintains significant energy from shorter than 16" barrels. they never set out to create the perfect hunting round. they also didn't intend to create the cheapest plinking round.
personally, I prefer the 6.8 to the 300 round but I own both. imo, the 6.8 significantly exceeds the 300 on whitetails but I am beginning to think that some 300 offerings are more than adequate within 200 yards (fusion and Hornady).
nws - is it the cost compared to 308 and x39? the lack of range? the limited hunting-specific commercial ammo offerings? or a combination of the above?
I think it's a cool round and has amazing versatility, but the American civilian consumer generally doesn't need versatility. That said if you demand an AR platform 30 caliber solution it's really the only way to goFor my uses it didn't do anything I couldn't do with a 308 or a 7.62x39 better.
In my opinion it is a great round for shooting people or paper. Not much utility beyond those two targets, both of which I try to avoid shooting at as much as possible.
I think it's a cool round and has amazing versatility, but the American civilian consumer generally doesn't need versatility. That said if you demand an AR platform 30 caliber solution it's really the only way to go
what type/brand of bolt are you running in your x39 AR? have you had any issues?Disagree. I have no interest in shooting subs and as such my x39 AR is a much better gun for my needs.
what type/brand of bolt are you running in your x39 AR? have you had any issues?
I'm trying to decide if the interwebz hub-bub is real or if it's due to madeup rumors by 556 fanboys on arfcom.
Ambush, as in Daniel Defense or some other company?Ambush arms nickel boron. Zero issues. Always fired suppressed.