Author Topic: AR Style rifle?  (Read 1756 times)

Offline EskimoJoe

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #15 on: August 28, 2011, 03:46:15 AM »
Your kidding right?

An '06 Frankenstein AR is not an AR-15


Never said it was an AR-15.
Said it was an AR.

I think, sir, that you're the one who should be 'getting a grip'.

And yes, if your 870 shoots an '06, it's still an 870.
It just shoots an '06.
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Offline Vudu15

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #16 on: August 28, 2011, 03:51:00 AM »
The reason for an AR is to give you rifle ballistics in a small package, but once you get into the long action category you might as well go back to a Bolt gun for the simple fact that you no longer need that close quarters part of the ar because with ammo that size you should be sitting nice and safe at a respectable range. not blasting your way through a house like your carring an MP5 or something. Plus I just dont think the barrel on a AR frame will get you a whole lot from the '06 round.
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Offline Slash27

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #17 on: August 28, 2011, 05:26:01 AM »
Pretty sure these guys building weapons on AR platforms may just have themselves a clue.

Offline DaHand

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #18 on: August 28, 2011, 06:35:31 AM »
The title made me laugh so hard!  Thanks, needed that this morning.

Offline kamori

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #19 on: August 28, 2011, 09:53:01 AM »
Pretty sure these guys building weapons on AR platforms may just have themselves a clue.

The engineering has been done from the ground up. I wont reveal the manufacturer yet but will once I know its in production I will. They would not go here unless there was a market. Theres already a large .308 market but little options out there, This is being targeted at the same time as the 30-06. Trust me people are wanting more use out of their AR Style rifles besides target practice or filling a tree full of lead or shooting beer bottles, so hunting is a great avenue to explore for a rifle like this.

Heres an elk taken with an AR-.308 I would not go after an elk with a .308 This one was taken at 80feet in thick timber a good shot but still a high chance of wounding a animal.


For those Nay sayers about wounding ELK. I have tracked 3 different animals over the years that some yahoo hit multiple times with a small caliber. One had 3 rounds through its hind quarters and one shoulder hit. 3 of us tracked and jumped that elk for a whole day in thick timber and finally were able to put it out of its misery. Pathetic Hunter who did that to that elk.

KAM
« Last Edit: August 28, 2011, 10:07:25 AM by kamori »

Offline kamori

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #20 on: August 28, 2011, 10:09:04 AM »
The title made me laugh so hard!  Thanks, needed that this morning.

More thoughts here? Looks like a Legitimate term.

http://www.fieldandstream.com/photos/gallery/hunting/2009/05/fs-picks-25-best-ar-style-rifles
« Last Edit: August 28, 2011, 10:19:23 AM by kamori »

Offline Rich52

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #21 on: August 28, 2011, 10:59:00 AM »
How does shooting an elk with a .308 translate into "high chance of wounding the animal"?

The .308 Win will cleanly take any Elk on the planet and at a lot longer range then 80 yrds. I bet more Elk have been cripped by yahoos shooting .300 & .338 mags then by .308 Wins. Most of all the Weatherbys, the rifle of choice for boneheads who all of a sudden at middle age decide they are big game hunters. Or who show up with their laser range finders.

The engineering has been done from the ground up. I wont reveal the manufacturer yet but will once I know its in production I will. They would not go here unless there was a market. Theres already a large .308 market but little options out there, This is being targeted at the same time as the 30-06. Trust me people are wanting more use out of their AR Style rifles besides target practice or filling a tree full of lead or shooting beer bottles, so hunting is a great avenue to explore for a rifle like this.

Heres an elk taken with an AR-.308 I would not go after an elk with a .308 This one was taken at 80feet in thick timber a good shot but still a high chance of wounding a animal.


For those Nay sayers about wounding ELK. I have tracked 3 different animals over the years that some yahoo hit multiple times with a small caliber. One had 3 rounds through its hind quarters and one shoulder hit. 3 of us tracked and jumped that elk for a whole day in thick timber and finally were able to put it out of its misery. Pathetic Hunter who did that to that elk.

KAM
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Offline Dago

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #22 on: August 28, 2011, 12:21:20 PM »
Foolish?  Really...I think Not, Theres a large untaped market for the larger cal. 30-06 is also .270 compatible. Thinking like the sheep keep you in the flock...

KAM

The 30-06 is the same caliber as the .308.   And I agree, there is no reason to produce this version.
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Offline kamori

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #23 on: August 28, 2011, 12:37:55 PM »
How does shooting an elk with a .308 translate into "high chance of wounding the animal"?

The .308 Win will cleanly take any Elk on the planet and at a lot longer range then 80 yrds. I bet more Elk have been cripped by yahoos shooting .300 & .338 mags then by .308 Wins. Most of all the Weatherbys, the rifle of choice for boneheads who all of a sudden at middle age decide they are big game hunters. Or who show up with their laser range finders.


First of all nobody said 80 yards.

Secondly, There is a big difference in .308 and 30-06. The cartridge is smaller than a 30-06. This translates in velocity and kinetic energy stored differences. This Idea that someone always gets a perfect kill shot is ridiculous. Ive been hunting Elk for 32 years. Ive seen all kinds of situations where a .308 or .270 will not have the stopping power. Its the Kinetic energy that will drop a 600 lb. animal if the shot isn't in a PERFECT spot. I wouldn't go after an elk with a .308 Its irresponsible in my experience. In my point of view the first concern should always be the animal and how quickly you can take its life.

Heres some great documentation on the .30 cal debate.

http://home.earthlink.net/~manzanovalph/Compared30Calibers.pdf


KAm
« Last Edit: August 28, 2011, 12:57:43 PM by kamori »

Offline Rob52240

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #24 on: August 28, 2011, 01:22:57 PM »
been done already.

If I had a gun with 3 bullets and I was locked in a room with Bin Laden, Hitler, Saddam and Zipp...  I would shoot Zipp 3 times.

Offline Dago

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #25 on: August 28, 2011, 01:35:14 PM »
First of all nobody said 80 yards.

Secondly, There is a big difference in .308 and 30-06. The cartridge is smaller than a 30-06. This translates in velocity and kinetic energy stored differences. This Idea that someone always gets a perfect kill shot is ridiculous. Ive been hunting Elk for 32 years. Ive seen all kinds of situations where a .308 or .270 will not have the stopping power. Its the Kinetic energy that will drop a 600 lb. animal if the shot isn't in a PERFECT spot. I wouldn't go after an elk with a .308 Its irresponsible in my experience. In my point of view the first concern should always be the animal and how quickly you can take its life.

Heres some great documentation on the .30 cal debate.

http://home.earthlink.net/~manzanovalph/Compared30Calibers.pdf


KAm

No, I think you have been hunting for one year, 32 times, or you would have known the 30-06 is the same caliber as the .308 win, and you would know a .308 would stop an elk.
"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, chocolate in one hand, martini in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming "WOO HOO what a ride!"

Offline kamori

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #26 on: August 28, 2011, 01:49:19 PM »
Yeah good luck with that.....I never said they were not same cal. Same cal doesn't mean same velocity, trajectory and kinetic energy. I never said a .308 would not Kill and elk.....heck a .22 will kill an elk if you have the perfect shot and time.

I believe its not the best all around Bullet for the diverse conditions while hunting I.E. The different shots that happen while in the field. My experience has taught me that no matter how good of a shot someone is there are conditions beyond our control.

Nice try though...

I think that theses AR guys will benefit from the larger Round since more and more of them are starting to Hunt with them.

Kam

Offline Rich52

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #27 on: August 28, 2011, 02:01:20 PM »
I dont need to read anything cause Ive been hunting all my life. Ive hunted elk quite a bit too as well as many other big game animals in USA, Canada, Africa. Shot placement is the only thing that means anything once a adequate round/rifle is chosen, .270 Win on up. You keep talking about these "situations" youv been in when the .308 isnt enough yet you dont describe them, "fancy that". An experienced rifleman with a .308 will cleanly take an elk while a bonehead with a .338 Weatherby can cleanly cripp one at 200 yrds.

My last Elk hunt I spent an entire day helping to track down a cripp that some goofball in my party shot in the rear end from 125 yrds with a .300 Weatherby. We never got the animal. When we were sighting our rifles the first day I saw how scared this guy was of that .300 mag I told the head guide to please put my spare 3006 in his hands. Or a .270, or a .308.

Go to Africa and they think Americans are nuts with all their talk about "kinetic energy". They know that all that matters is chooseing an adequate caliber/bullet and then placing it in the animals boiler room. Ive been reloading for over 40 years so theres nothing new you can really tell me about the differences between the .308 Win and 3006. You know in all those decades of hunting you are the first person Ive ever met who describes the .308 Win as "inadequate" for Elk hunting.


First of all nobody said 80 yards.

Secondly, There is a big difference in .308 and 30-06. The cartridge is smaller than a 30-06. This translates in velocity and kinetic energy stored differences. This Idea that someone always gets a perfect kill shot is ridiculous. Ive been hunting Elk for 32 years. Ive seen all kinds of situations where a .308 or .270 will not have the stopping power. Its the Kinetic energy that will drop a 600 lb. animal if the shot isn't in a PERFECT spot. I wouldn't go after an elk with a .308 Its irresponsible in my experience. In my point of view the first concern should always be the animal and how quickly you can take its life.

Heres some great documentation on the .30 cal debate.

http://home.earthlink.net/~manzanovalph/Compared30Calibers.pdf


KAm
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Offline kamori

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #28 on: August 28, 2011, 03:00:46 PM »
I dont need to read anything cause Ive been hunting all my life. Ive hunted elk quite a bit too as well as many other big game animals in USA, Canada, Africa. Shot placement is the only thing that means anything once a adequate round/rifle is chosen, .270 Win on up. You keep talking about these "situations" youv been in when the .308 isnt enough yet you dont describe them, "fancy that". An experienced rifleman with a .308 will cleanly take an elk while a bonehead with a .338 Weatherby can cleanly cripp one at 200 yrds.

My last Elk hunt I spent an entire day helping to track down a cripp that some goofball in my party shot in the rear end from 125 yrds with a .300 Weatherby. We never got the animal. When we were sighting our rifles the first day I saw how scared this guy was of that .300 mag I told the head guide to please put my spare 3006 in his hands. Or a .270, or a .308.

Go to Africa and they think Americans are nuts with all their talk about "kinetic energy". They know that all that matters is chooseing an adequate caliber/bullet and then placing it in the animals boiler room. Ive been reloading for over 40 years so theres nothing new you can really tell me about the differences between the .308 Win and 3006. You know in all those decades of hunting you are the first person Ive ever met who describes the .308 Win as "inadequate" for Elk hunting.



Again I never said inadequate, and I love theses personal attacks..Hummm. I was clear that its my point of view. Its a debate thats as old as the calibers themselves. If you have been out that much then would you want to tell me how you don't have different shooting situations? I'm interested in that.

I hunt in a very diverse area. Heavily(dense trees), Open area(Long range possibilities), Elk at a dead run in the trees(snapshot), bedded down, hell I got one sleeping once. Some a .308 would have been fine. My last one I dont believe it would have been.

Example: 437 Yards(did the range find when we went back to drag it out) at the top of a clearing crossing left too right. He was on the trot crossing. I put my 400 yard marker(in my Burris FullfieldII) just inches under the top of his back. I panned my sight off the animal to the right( I shoot with both eyes open) and held steady(I was laying down with my pack as a rest)I waited until he came into the edge of my scope and pulled the trigger. The round hit him at the base of the neck and hit his uphill shoulder blade(furtherest from me). The round stopped at the shoulder blade where the leg joint socket is(Thats about 2" above and infront of the Heart BTW.). Its a 30-06 Nosler Accubond 180grn loaded at 2700ft per/sec. The bullets impact shattered its spine due to the KENETIC ENERGY stored. It dropped immediately. No suffering a clean kill. The Energy stored at that range is apx 500ft/lbs less from a 180 grn .308. Would a .308 have done the job, possible but I know that the 06 Does and will. I don't like to see animals suffer at all. Ive been taught that and have taught it to my kids.
That is the most time ive ever had for a shot in my years hunting up there.

What I am saying AGAIN is, I prefer the stopping power of the 30-06 round over the .308, .270. 7mm, etc. Ballistics don't lie. I like the added insurance. I have a good friend in Alaska that grew up hunting here in Montana and hes told me many times the shooting is easier than we have it here where we grew up hunting. I think he means is that Mostly theres more time for the shot due to the larger animal population and LESS Hunting pressure. Again thats HIS point of view, yours may be different.

I thought this was a great tool that Burris put out...  http://www.burrisoptics.com/pdf/BALLPLEX.pdf


Please HUNTING in AFRICA, Thats a totally different debate.

Tootles :)

KAM
« Last Edit: August 28, 2011, 03:25:53 PM by kamori »

Offline Dago

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Re: AR Style rifle?
« Reply #29 on: August 28, 2011, 03:58:58 PM »
Again I never said inadequate, and I love theses personal attacks..Hummm. I was clear that its my point of view. Its a debate thats as old as the calibers themselves. If you have been out that much then would you want to tell me how you don't have different shooting situations? I'm interested in that.

I hunt in a very diverse area. Heavily(dense trees), Open area(Long range possibilities), Elk at a dead run in the trees(snapshot), bedded down, hell I got one sleeping once. Some a .308 would have been fine. My last one I dont believe it would have been.

Example: 437 Yards(did the range find when we went back to drag it out) at the top of a clearing crossing left too right. He was on the trot crossing. I put my 400 yard marker(in my Burris FullfieldII) just inches under the top of his back. I panned my sight off the animal to the right( I shoot with both eyes open) and held steady(I was laying down with my pack as a rest)I waited until he came into the edge of my scope and pulled the trigger. The round hit him at the base of the neck and hit his uphill shoulder blade(furtherest from me). The round stopped at the shoulder blade where the leg joint socket is(Thats about 2" above and infront of the Heart BTW.). Its a 30-06 Nosler Accubond 180grn loaded at 2700ft per/sec. The bullets impact shattered its spine due to the KENETIC ENERGY stored. It dropped immediately. No suffering a clean kill. The Energy stored at that range is apx 500ft/lbs less from a 180 grn .308. Would a .308 have done the job, possible but I know that the 06 Does and will. I don't like to see animals suffer at all. Ive been taught that and have taught it to my kids.
That is the most time ive ever had for a shot in my years hunting up there.

What I am saying AGAIN is, I prefer the stopping power of the 30-06 round over the .308, .270. 7mm, etc. Ballistics don't lie. I like the added insurance. I have a good friend in Alaska that grew up hunting here in Montana and hes told me many times the shooting is easier than we have it here where we grew up hunting. I think he means is that Mostly theres more time for the shot due to the larger animal population and LESS Hunting pressure. Again thats HIS point of view, yours may be different.

I thought this was a great tool that Burris put out...  http://www.burrisoptics.com/pdf/BALLPLEX.pdf


Please HUNTING in AFRICA, Thats a totally different debate.

Tootles :)

KAM

My mistake, I though you said it was a larger caliber than the .308, you were comparing to the .270.   Regardless, I think .308 win is still plenty to take an elk.  (assuming of course you can place a shot in the critical areas, as you should be able to do before you hunt an animal in my opinion)

"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, chocolate in one hand, martini in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming "WOO HOO what a ride!"