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Posted: 8/12/2005 3:47:34 PM EDT
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I'd make sure something is not holding the buffer back from the carrier first, like the buffer detent or what have you. The buffer should be in constant contact with the carrier. When you close the upper you should see the carrier push the buffer back slightly. When they aren't held together good they bounce apart. Also, make sure the back of the carrier face is smooth. Danny |
| Maybe just a product of the half circle carrier. There is a lot of movement possible on the carrier and buffer of any AR. I have a Hesse lower that the tube comes out on an obvious angle but it does not bind or wear the buffer like that. Maybe the back end of the carrier has no burrs but it could be it is not flat. |
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for the record, wear on the face of the buffer is not merely cosmetic, we've already had one guy who posted pictures of his very worn buffer AFTER it spit the weights into his carrier. if buffer face wear was normal the Army would have a gage or a check for it. None exists. |
I think I'd probably notice if it had THAT much wear, before the weights dumped out. It does concern me, though, that it looks like that after only a few hundred rounds. It does look (just eyeballing it and looking at how the GG&G agency sling mount sits on the LRE) like the LRE is a little bit cockeyed upward (toward 12'o'clock). I'm going to run a Colt M16 carrier in it, which was my plan from the beginning for other reasons - do you think that will help keep the surfaces mated better? Do you think this is the lower itself, or the LRE, that's off? |
And that's why I'm wondering if it's that pinko liberal half-circle carrier that's doing it. My old Colt - with a full circle carrier - had a virtually spotless buffer. You'd hardly even know it had been fired. Goddamn non-sear-tripping piece of crap...
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They did put those in commercial (non-LE, non-military) guns for short time, along with plastic buttstock doors, as a cost-saving measure, back when they were scared about losing market share to other companies. Fortunately they stopped doing this. I guess they finally realized that at least SOME people were paying $950 for a Colt instead of $800 for a [insert second tier brand] so they WOULDN'T get cheesy parts. |
I think it is the damn 1/2 circle carrier, as my 89 does this but my full circles do not. I changed out the carrier finally to a 16 one and it seems to have stopped completely. I'd imagine the carrier tries to rock as it is not balanced digging the cut ends into the buffer. |
| All my buffers have some wear to the mating surface, I just chalk it up as normal wear. A little bit of Tetra grease on the buffer face helps out. Routine maintenance and cleaning after the range should alert me if the wear is increasing or becoming abnormal, as in removing metal. |
I did a relatively light buff with the dremel and some jeweler's polish, just on the bottom/rear edges of the carrier, when I first noticed the buffer wear starting. Doesn't look like that helped. I should have the 16 carrier the end of the week ... but of course, I'll have to check that for burrs as well. QUIB- I avoid using grease in my guns, and especially ARs. It attracts too much crud and turns into a grinding paste. |
Are you familiar with Tetra Grease? I simply wipe a thin barrier film of grease on the face of the buffer. It’s not like I’m packing the entire buffer tube with axel grease! Just a suggestion! Tetra® Gun Grease |
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