AR-15 with DI tend to equalize gas pressure due to having vent holes (but are more prone to blowback), short stroke gas pistons can be much more effected by more back pressure.
@@LegacyArmsIntl May I ask were does the HK 416 stand in the best assault rifles you have setted and may I ask what are your favourite assault rifles you have setted through the years and were the HK 416 measures up thanks??? 👍👍👍👍👍.
He was the senior NCO at the Unit at the time when they made the request, so he was instrumental in its development. When I commanded the US Army Sniper School and we were developing the M107 after the M82a1, I sent two NCOs to Barrett TDY for a year to help with the development. There are some great NCOs out there that are responsible for all of the amazing firearms we use today and Larry is definitely at the top of the list.
@@LegacyArmsIntl thanks for explaining a little. Would be nice to hear more about some of those stories in your videos. I never knew nco’s worked that close. I thought it was just requirements and testing
pray NFA is repealed with one hand and file a tax stamp with the other and see which one gets approved first. haha. The NFA has been in place since 1934...its not going to disappear under the Biden Admin.
Disregard unconstitutional, unjust law "Swift link" if you are _EDIT_ too scared "DIAS repair" kit or Standard Mfg lower with "M16" drill jig otherwise
Jason, I was wondering if an H5 or H6 (7.5 oz - 8.6 oz) buffer would slow it down to 600 RPMs or so? Adding all tungsten to a custom carbine length 3.25" buffer case gives me an H5 and H6. That and a flatwire carbine buffer spring might slow this down a bit. My fav ROF is in the 600 RPM range. 850 is a little much (even if it was designed for that speed) and 1200 with a can is kinda outrageous (super spicy fun though!).
You have a valid point and the truth is I just don’t know. With every other AR-15 and M-16 I play with buffers quite a bit to get things dialed in. Everything about the 416 is unique and proprietary. I have two of them and both of them are completely stock with the exception of adding the Geissele 416 Select fire triggers. I feel like the minute you start to swap out the HK parts for aftermarket things go sideways. I have a kit with every weight buffer in it and next time I go to the range I will try and it seems what happens.
Sounds good, and looking forward to hearing how the buffer weights change the ROF on the HK. On the MCX, there is no buffer weight to work with, so the only ROF control is the amount of gas allowed. The Rattler 300aac in the '+' position suppressed with supersonics gets up in the 1000 rpm range. The Virtus 556 in the + position suppressed does as well. I haven't really tried either in the '-' position, but next range visit, we'll test it out. @@LegacyArmsIntl
@@jesusmariomartinez 1. Maintain a proper stance 2. Pull the trigger consistently Test yourself at the range by "dry firing" at a target If you sway or stumble: keep practicing until your aim is steady If you flinch without actually shooting: dry fire until your anticipation of recoil is alleviated
@@weasle2904 maybe not. But it has a really fast twist rate that favors heavier bullets. Ppl that shoot it talk about how accurate it is. Most say its bigger and heavier. Not many say its gunna replace the m4. But it shoots similar velocities, diameters, and bullet weights to a 6.5prc out of a shorter barrel. They will prob make a steel core bullet too.
The main upgrades I did on this were the upgrades added on the newer models. My 416 is one of the first ones to be imported so I added an ambi mag/bolt release, new A5 style stock and the Geissele SSF 416 trigger.
No, at least the one I have can’t be. They have done a few iterations of selector over the years. The ones I have are a Gen 1 and Gen 2 upper and lower receiver that has mostly a5 parts on it. The new a5 model may be different but I haven’t gotten my hands on one yet. The ones I have will only allow the selector to be moved to safe when the hammer is cocked.
After some calculations, the rifle magdumps a standard capacity magazine (30 rounds) in about 1.5 seconds with the suppressor on. 30÷1.5=20, then to convert it to RPM: 20x60=1200!! I also tried a metromone in 1200 bpm and it (the HK416) kind of follows the same rythm as the metronome. So maybe 1100-1200 is accurate. Amazing.