PieterCoetzee
Custom
The older I get, the more I realize my idea of a long range patrol is shorter and shorter. OK its beyond the mailbox but not on foot to the next state. The soldier in me still screams to do something. So I started thinking about how to fill the soldier calling and the age saying "are you crazy?"
Thats when I remembered the roof top Koreans, made so famous during the LA Riots and Clint Eastwood saying "Get off my lawn". The USMC adopted the M27 IAR (as in a modern M1918 BAR). There are a couple shops building civilian ARs to mimic the role of the Soviet/Russian RPK (a heavy long barrel bipod equipped AK). Many most of the builds use ARs with heavier than normal barrels and some have added a heat sink to keep the gas tube from rupturing during prolonged bursts from a binary or FRTs.
The soldier in me says "you" cant hump but you can still secure a fixed site OR just have fun at the range....
So I put together a couple AR-RPKs and added my Ares Beltfed AR
Ares (now Fightlight) AR upper clips onto a lower (does require a proprietary (smaller bolt release to avoid snagging on the linked ammo) The upper has quick change barrels to prevent overheating.
Loose belts can be used. To use a "tupperware" belt holder or cloth "nutsack", Ares supplies an adapter that clips in place in the magazine well. It does however make the ammo hang low. Since these pics Ive added a lower with out a magwel that raises the "nutsack" to M249 height.
Super heavy 24 inch barrel and gas tube with heat sink. Note the carry handle and the LMG Bipod. Standard AR lower works with 30, 40, and 100 round Beta drums
AR-RPK mounted on MG3 AA Bipod with 40 Round mag. ALSO K version with 13" HBAR and B&T Grenade Launcher
The key to beltfeds is LINKS. I worry more about picking up and sorting links than fired brass after a range session. I have a linking machine but ammo can be almost as easily linked by hand. For the range I run only FMJ, for tactical loadouts I run FMJ to Tracer at a 4:1 ratio
Sorry I dont have pics of the drums of empty links. I buy them in 10,000 lots
Thats when I remembered the roof top Koreans, made so famous during the LA Riots and Clint Eastwood saying "Get off my lawn". The USMC adopted the M27 IAR (as in a modern M1918 BAR). There are a couple shops building civilian ARs to mimic the role of the Soviet/Russian RPK (a heavy long barrel bipod equipped AK). Many most of the builds use ARs with heavier than normal barrels and some have added a heat sink to keep the gas tube from rupturing during prolonged bursts from a binary or FRTs.
The soldier in me says "you" cant hump but you can still secure a fixed site OR just have fun at the range....
So I put together a couple AR-RPKs and added my Ares Beltfed AR
Ares (now Fightlight) AR upper clips onto a lower (does require a proprietary (smaller bolt release to avoid snagging on the linked ammo) The upper has quick change barrels to prevent overheating.
Loose belts can be used. To use a "tupperware" belt holder or cloth "nutsack", Ares supplies an adapter that clips in place in the magazine well. It does however make the ammo hang low. Since these pics Ive added a lower with out a magwel that raises the "nutsack" to M249 height.
Super heavy 24 inch barrel and gas tube with heat sink. Note the carry handle and the LMG Bipod. Standard AR lower works with 30, 40, and 100 round Beta drums
AR-RPK mounted on MG3 AA Bipod with 40 Round mag. ALSO K version with 13" HBAR and B&T Grenade Launcher
The key to beltfeds is LINKS. I worry more about picking up and sorting links than fired brass after a range session. I have a linking machine but ammo can be almost as easily linked by hand. For the range I run only FMJ, for tactical loadouts I run FMJ to Tracer at a 4:1 ratio
Sorry I dont have pics of the drums of empty links. I buy them in 10,000 lots
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