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Advantages of an adjustable gas block for AR-15?
Been poking around the idea of getting an adjustable gas block for my AR-15. Been trying to look into the pros and cons, and have found a product called the "Govnah" http://micromoa.com/ that looks promising. What I'm trying to discern is whether I would be reaping much, if any benefits with it.
Most people running adjustable gas blocks, are doing so because of 1 of 3 reasons it seems. They are because they are running a suppressor, running a short barreled rifle, running a wide range of ammo (from cheap to high end).
In my situation, I'm doing none of these things. I don't have any class 3 items (or live in a state which allows them). And I almost exclusively shoot federal xm193, because that's whats cheapest and available near me. I never shoot tula or wolf, because local shops wont carry it.
So what I want to know is if there are any pros/cons to installing one on my gun. Would this possibly pose any problems down the line? I know even small items like a BAD lever can gum up certain guns.
The gun in question a Daniel Defense m4v4, carbine length gas tube, H weight buffer, 16inch barrel. Its never given me problems in reliability, so its not like I'm trying to fix a broken problem. I just feel like dressing it up a bit.
6 個解答
- 8 年前最愛解答
Unless you have a specific need to tune the gas system, save your money and put it into another accessory or ammo that will serve a need/purpose. Technically you could adjust the gas system, tune it down so that less gas is being diverted resulting in less rearward impulse in cycling which could lessen recoil. That said, the 5.56 doesn't have much recoil to start with, and depending on what round you are shooting and the amounts of powder that are used, you could end up short-stroking (the bcg not travelling far enough back to eject the spent shell and chamber a new round). That is just asking for reliability issues in the future. If it was a purpose built, competition rifle, and you were only planning on using one brand of ammo, then maybe that could be a reason to go that route, but otherwise stick with what you have and invest your money elsewhere. For most people/rifles there is no need for gas block adjustments (aside from very specific tuning applications). I say upgrade your trigger, optics, or more ammo; something that WILL give you better performance. No need to throw money at a problem that you don't have. Good luck, happy hunting-
資料來源: Obsessed with everything that goes BOOOOM !!! :) - ?Lv 58 年前
I have adjustable gas blocks 4 of my AR's and I will only ever use adjustable gas blocks from here on out. The sad reality is that most AR shooters will spend more money on their gun than on ammo and will never shoot it enough to understand the benefit of a tuned gun. The fact you only run 1 kind of ammo makes you benefit even more from an adjustable gas block than someone that runs all kinds. The idea is not to change it daily, it is to set it and leave it.
Perfectly balancing the gas system with your ammo and the buffer means you have a much smoother running gun, with less recoil and less wear on parts. Generally carbine length gas systems come overgassed out of the factory. That lets them run more ammo without short stroking. It also destroys bolts. A bolt that might have lasted 10,000+ rounds in another gun will fail around the 2000+ mark.
Having said all that, the Govnah is overpriced and over bulked. You can get an adjustable gas block for half that or less. From the look of it, they built to it only fit under a handguard that is compatible with an Adams arms (standard) piston kit. Not all rails allow that. More importantly to you, the only Daniel Defense rail that would for sure fit over it is the Omega.
I would suggest the Spikes, PRI, seekins, BTE or even the Syrac adjustables over the one you are looking at. They are half the price and will fit under any free floating.
- John J. SLv 78 年前
Buy a fancy folding stock. If you don't need it why buy more trouble? I suppose putting money on ammo and range time is a better allocation of my resources seems better than making more work having to adjust the block for *optimal* spitting out of casings in a rifle that doesn't have that problem. MHO.
- AndyLv 78 年前
If it's not broke don't fix it. I don't really see how an adjustable gas block would be considered a dress up item,but each to his own. Hanging an unneeded part off a gun seems like a waste of time and money to me.