AndyC wrote:Range/target pics are expected - you know the drill :)
Actually Andy, I'd like for both of us to shoot my SCAR and your FAL side by side and compare notes. It might make for an informative thread here. The more I handle this rifle, the more it reminds me of shooting your FAL that day. In building this rifle (the H select-fire version), FNH has positioned itself to once again become "the right arm of the free world". That may be a case of hyperventilation a little bit, but given the mandate under which FNH originally
designed the SCAR and SCAR Heavy, and given the general dissatisfaction with the 5.56 cartridge in certain kinds of urban and long-range desert and mountain combat, it isn't beyond conceivable that they might win in a head-to-head competition against other .308 caliber battle rifles if the U.S. military ever decides to place issued .308s in the hands of regular ground troops.
The biggest hill to surmount is price - this thing is bloody expensive - but that can be achieved with economies of scale. Also, FNH has perhaps made a strategic error (at least for the short term), but that error is remediable. The 16s is manufactured in the United States, where the bulk of the (legal) civilian market for the product exists. However, the 17s is manufactured in Belgium, thousands of miles away from its largest customer base - as most europeans cannot easily get their hands on one. Since FNH already has a significant manufacturing presence in the U.S., where, in addition to the 16s, they also manufacture M16s/M4s, as well as M240B and M249 SAWs, and other military weapons for the U.S. military, it seems like ti would be fairly easy for FNH to transfer manufacture of the 17s to the U.S. By offering a $3,000 rifle in a market space populated by $1,500 to $2,500 rifles (including some gas-piston models) they are less than competitive. You have to REALLY want one to buy one. They could be a lot more competitive if they could take the transportation/importation costs out of the picture.
And by the way, the 17s is subject the same import restrictions as AKs. The rifles arrive here completed, and then some of the parts are replaced with American-made parts to satisfy that requirement, and that drives the cost up too.
But if they could get the price of this thing down into the same range as other gas-piston .308 battle rifles currently being offered, they could sweep the market. It is a
nice rifle.
CC Italian wrote:I have been toying with the idea of one but I have no experience with the 308 in such a small package. Not sure it would be a good almost 3k investment for someone with only M1A and ar15 experience. Both my father and father in law have a ar15 but it just doesn't bring that joy to my heart that I get when shooting that 7.62 X 51 that is so addictive to shoot. I was also looking into the 6.8 spc which from my very limited knowledge ( I have only shot one) seems to be a nice compromise being that it is the smaller 15 platform with the .277 round.
Needless to say please tell us how it runs. I am also interested if you could tell me TAM how it recoils between a 16-18 inch AR10 and M1A scout. If you have shot both.
I'll let you know. I have owned an M1A loaded, and I currently own a (
for sale) AR-10. Until now, I would have called the M1A the King of Battle Rifles. It is accurate, runs reliably, and beautiful to look at. It also speaks to me from an emotional place. My AR-10 is a heavy-barreled SASS rifle, and it is more accurate than the M1A was, but I have no emotional attachment to it.....one reason I'm selling it. The M1A weighed in at about 9 lb + mount and scope, so call it 10.5-11 lbs all up with a loaded mag. I weighed my AR-10 just the day before yesterday, and without mount, scope, or magazine, it weighs 11 lb 5 oz. It is heavy. Recoil in those two guns is, well....... .308 recoil, with the lighter M1A would have slightly more of it, mitigated by the gas-piston design. The AR-10 recoil feels a little sharper, but that is because the design of the muzzle device directs all recoil straight back with no muzzle flip at all. Not harder, just sharper. The SCAR, from what I have
read—meaning I won't know if it's true until I try it myself—is
supposed to be the softest shooting .308 battle rifle, because of the weight of the reciprocating mass of the bolt/carrier system, as well as the mitigating effects of the gas-piston system....... but I don't know yet for sure.
Real world reviews I've read on forums and such say that owners are getting 1-2 MOA at 100 yards using the supplied iron sights. That dog won't hunt with my eyes, but we'll see how it performs with a 4-16 Viper PST on it. That said, all of the reviews I've read, amateur and professional alike, have praised the accuracy of FN hammer-forged barrels, which are exceedingly accurate across their product line. Witness the reputation of the FNAR, for example.
So we'll see. It should be a fun day. Sadly, I won't have time to get to the range until next week some time. I'll be going crazy in the interim.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT