Originally posted by lazs2
the springfields.... woe onto some of the springfields... I have heard that they don't use forged recievers... I have heard that because of that... the recievers stretch. stretch reciever=bad. Maybe this is not true anymore but you want a forged reciever no matter what... nothing else is "just as good"
lazs
Lazs, please stop hanging around with old wives, they tend to tell tales.

While a forged receiver is considered a better receiver, a quality cast receiver is still an excellant receiver. Of course, if you think you are going to shoot in excess of 50,000 rounds from one rifle, it might start to become a concern. Basically, if the receiver passes the Rockwell Hardness test, you will not stretch it and you will never know the differance cast or forged.
Have you ever known anyone who had a stretched receiver? Me neither. I haven't ever even heard of anyone actually having this problem, anywhere. Maybe it has happened somewhere to someone, but I am not aware of it.
BTW, LRB Arms sells forged M14 rifles and Smith Enterprises is coming out with a forged one too, and I believe Fulton Armory may be thinking of doing it. (M1A is a Springfield Armory trademark for their M14 semi-auto rifle)
I do get a kick out of those who talk about getting a bolt gun in place of a semi-auto for accuracy reasons. It is an extremely rare shooter using custom handloads, a shooting bench and a target an awful long way who might be able to see a differance between a bolt gun and a quality semi-auto like a well prepped and setup M1A.
dago