By 2g1c2 girls 1 cup
By 2g1c2 girls 1 cup
Q: My bolt carrier looks like it is a full-auto carrier. How do I tell the difference?
A: At the request of customers and based on questions posed to our technical staff we have added details about identification of a full-auto and semi-auto bolt carrier. We hope the following information can clear up any questions you have about your bolt carrier. Should you still have questions please contact our Customer Service team for assistance.
How to tell the difference between a full-auto and semi-auto bolt carrier assembly.
For a bolt carrier to be considered full-auto the lug on the under side of the carrier MUST be the SAME LENGTH as the top portion of the rear of the carrier.
For a bolt carrier to be considered semi-auto the lug on the under side must be machined back only a short amount. This additional quarter inch or so is the portion that is used to trip the auto sear of a fully-automatic M16. The shorter length of the lug on the under side cannot trip an auto sear.
Timing is ultra critical with regard to full-auto fire of any machine gun. Without the critical location of the forward edge of the under side lug on the bolt carrier assembly (1/8" is enough to create the necessary timing difference) to prevent full-auto fire and function as a machine gun.
The length of this under side lug is the only critical dimension or feature that determines whether or not a bolt carrier is considered full-auto.
Although a fully covered firing pin area on the bottom of a bolt carrier assembly is a full-auto feature it has no bearing to whether a carrier is a full-auto model or not. On a technical note the mil-spec variance for a full-auto carrier's under side lug is only +/- .0005" and anything more does not qualify as a mil-spec full-auto carrier.
Again, the semi-auto carrier is machined back just enough to make it a semi-auto carrier configuration.
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