Do you know if it was modified - like free floating the barrel?The US Navy fielded a M-16 team at Perry in the early 70's
I used a M14 at Camp Perry , Pres 100 match in 1966. Finished 15th. Tommy McWho was the very first person to shoot an AR rifle in a service rifle match? Was it a civilian or a member of the armed services?
If I remember right. They were off the rack M-16's Nothing special done to them.Do you know if it was modified - like free floating the barrel?
The M16/AR15 barrel/chamber fits into the receiver and is held into place with a barrel nut the old hand guards were held in place with a spring operated ring mounted to that nut and a front mount that trapped the handguard half's in a triangular stamped metal piece just behind the front sight, the new hand guards just attach to the rear barrel nut IF your using that type. there really is no "free floating" the barrel like in a wooden stock, if you think the old style two piece hand guards were moving the barrel around I doubt it, I was trained on Paris Island SC in 1975 per NRA rules on the 200,300 and 500 yard targets and if you applied what you were taught you could shoot small groups with worn out Veit Nam Era M16's, I had never before shot a gun in my life up until that point and shot 230 points out of a possible 250. so much for a free floating barrel. Semper Fi. IF I Remember correctly the longest kill shot with an M16 is 750 yardsDo you know if it was modified - like free floating the barrel?
Um… yeah. The front sling swivel attaches to the barrel (front sight tower ) on a standard A2 or A2 with the plastic hand guards. By using steel free float tube under the hand guards that has threads in front of the barrel nut and a sling swivel attached to it, the barrel is fully free inside the float tube and has no stress induced by slinging up tight as XTC shooters do.The M16/AR15 barrel/chamber fits into the receiver and is held into place with a barrel nut the old hand guards were held in place with a spring operated ring mounted to that nut and a front mount that trapped the handguard half's in a triangular stamped metal piece just behind the front sight, the new hand guards just attach to the rear barrel nut IF your using that type. there really is no "free floating" the barrel like in a wooden stock, if you think the old style two piece hand guards were moving the barrel around I doubt it, I was trained on Paris Island SC in 1975 per NRA rules on the 200,300 and 500 yard targets and if you applied what you were taught you could shoot small groups with worn out Veit Nam Era M16's, I had never before shot a gun in my life up until that point and shot 230 points out of a possible 250. so much for a free floating barrel. Semper Fi. IF I Remember correctly the longest kill shot with an M16 is 750 yards
Beat me to it, put one that I purchased from White Oak in the early 80,s still on that rifle and works as intended, clearanced the muzzle end of the hand guards with a hole saw with 1/8-3/16 clearance on the tube.Um… yeah. The front sling swivel attaches to the barrel (front sight tower ) on a standard A2 or A2 with the plastic hand guards. By using steel free float tube under the hand guards that has threads in front of the barrel nut and a sling swivel attached to it, the barrel is fully free inside the float tube and has no stress induced by slinging up tight as XTC shooters do.
View attachment 1590719
All of the newer Mloc quad rails fully free
Float the barrels.
Do you know if it was modified so not capable for full auto?The US Navy fielded a M-16 team at Perry in the early 70's
Derrick Martin would. I also saw a reference to a history of AR match rifle shooting in John Feamster's "Black Magic" while digging on some other sites if anyone has a copy of that.So nobody knows?
I don't know. the Navy may have changed out the selector and sear.Do you know if it was modified so not capable for full auto?