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Thread: My 22lr upper
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9 January 2016, 19:34 #1Senior Member
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My 22lr upper
so i figured i would build a 22lr upper. this is what i have so far. It's not assembled yet so this is just a mock up. The only parts i dont have yet are backup iron sites, buffer tube/stock kit, lower and pistol grip.
Upper:
Aero Precision stripped upper
taccom 3g 16" steel barrel
taccom 3g 22lr reliability kit
cmmg bolt
Nordic components .750 brake
noveske chainsaw 13.5" NSR
Optics:
aimpoint micro h1 in a bobro lower 1/3 mont
Lower:
Geissele SSA
BAD-CASS selector
Redi-Mag Better-mag S&W m&p15-22 magazine adapter
colt lower parts kit for everything else
Still on the list:
noveske/troy flip up sights
vltor imod stock kit
noveske end plate
bcm mod 1 grip
undecided lower.
unfortunately living in NJ we need to pin a muzzle brake on. luckily since this is a 22lr it doesnt have a gas block i can pin the .750 block on there and not need to worry about if i want to remove it and convert this to a different caliber.
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9 January 2016, 21:58 #2
I still need a .22lr Upper. I've had some issues trying to get .22lr's to feed reliably in the past. Have you run a taccom barrel before?
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9 January 2016, 22:34 #3
Looks good! I also need a .22lr upper
"Always do more than is required of you"
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9 January 2016, 23:47 #4Senior Member
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i havent run a taccom barrel yet. Im just sending this out to get the comp pinned so i can fire it up. I've researched it a lot and it seems the taccom reliability upgrade should help with feeding issues and using the better-mag with m&p15-22 mags works best for the bolt hold open. all research i did said the beyer barrels are the best, but this rifle is already as much as 5.56 upper since essentially its a more expensive bolt, a few additional parts, and everything else is exactly the same as a regular AR it's getting expensive fast.
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10 January 2016, 04:33 #5
Very nice and very expensive plinker! I love it! Range be damned; all of my guns are plinkers! Hoping for a report when you get it finished. Enjoy it!
There's no "Team" in F**K YOU!
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10 January 2016, 12:52 #6
Looks awesome. 22lr with a NSR is about as nice as you can make a .22 :)
I wish you could change out the quads on the mp15-22. That design is the epitome of 22 AR clone reliability
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10 January 2016, 13:33 #7
It is possible. You have to get a barrel nut adapter, which someone on the interwebs makes. Apparently the removal can be a little tricky in that you have to be delicate since it's polymer, but otherwise it's doable. Then you can install whatever factory barrel nut you want onto the adapter. I toyed with the idea a while back, but there were other things to spend my money on and the OEM rail is good enough, and still light that my wife might actually want to shoot it.
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10 January 2016, 14:42 #8
On a .22 LR upper can you build them out with any stripped upper you want?
Obviously the mags and bolt carrier group need to be special but I don't know who makes the needed parts for a .22 so I can price it all out to build one.
Also is a .22 LR strong enough to cycle the weapon with a standard buffer and spring?
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10 January 2016, 14:58 #9
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10 January 2016, 23:28 #10Senior Member
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Taccom makes a plug that keeps the pressure on the bolt carrier too so it really doesn't move
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10 January 2016, 23:30 #11Senior Member
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11 January 2016, 06:32 #12
Looking good! I've been playing around with either building a .22 upper or just picking up an M&P15-22.
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11 January 2016, 14:20 #13
I've done a few of these. The key to reliability is to keep the AR buffer spring in the lower and remove the buffer. Without significant force behind it, the bolt assembly tends to have poor engagement with the barrel extension which results in all kinds of weird failures. Also I like the solid polymer charging handles from CMMG without the channel in the center - helps prevent a really nasty type of jam where the case gets stuck in the charging handle.
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11 January 2016, 17:38 #14Senior Member
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Could you just fill in the slot where they get caught with some JB weld or similar?
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12 January 2016, 10:22 #15