Modern day piracy on the high seas. Kidnappings, murders, hijackings, theft, and attacks of vessels happen frequently. Sounds like it's a good time to arm up. Take an FNAR. From some hard core testing in TNP, the FNAR proved it's up to the task. It will dominate small bore 5.56mm or even 7.62x39mm rifles in range and power, giving the "Captain" more options in engagement (motor disabling, body armor penetration). This is just one of the fascintation POUs discussed for the capable FNAR. Based on the sporting BAR rifle, the FNAR features many upgrades making in more suitable for tactical use: M1913 Picatinny Rail on receiver, rails of forearm, widely adaptable ergos with buttpads and cheek pieces (included), comfortable pistol grip, matte finishing, parkerized chrome lined 1/11 fluted barrel, aluminum receiver, excellent 4.5 trigger, detachable 5, 10,20 rd mags (easy to load as well) and perfect checkering on the synthetic stock. A discussion of this sporting rifle in comparison to the M1A ensues with emphasis on pedigree. Reliability of the FNAR was outstanding with both ball, soft point, and match ammunition cycling with near perfect reliability. We did find rounds can lodge between the bolt and the upper receive due to tolerances. Accuracy was excellent and this SAPR is capable of sub MOA performance with match ammo and care (shown). Much of our shooting consisted of long range engagements on Actiontarget.com steel (use code nutnfancy) and the FNAR proved itself to be a smooth and fast shooter. Exactly the type of 7.62x51mm battle rifle you'd want to repel marauding pirates... or bad guys of any stripe. The weight on this LIGHT CONTOUR FNAR was outstanding at 9 lbs 1 oz. That's light for a 20" semi-auto in this caliber with a thick barrel. Full up weight with the Burris Fullfield II is 10 lbs 4 oz. Before "Firearmageddon" kicked off in Dec 2012, the FNAR respresented amazing value. You should have bought it while you could. For around $900 to $1000 the rifle could be had. 2012 Versions were the 16" Standard and 20" HB FNARs. A value and availability downside are the heavy 12.6 ounce blued steel magazines, at one time around $55 a piece. Other guns like M1A have better magazines in some respects. But the FNAR mags, even with their non-removable floorplates, function very well and are tough. Some other downsides: non-threaded barrel, a non-MOA Picatinny rail fequired the Nightforce Unimount 1.25 at $250, and non convenient bolt release. But in shooting and running the FNAR hard in TNP, these issues were forgotten as the rifle was a pleasure to shoot and demonstrated high reliability and accuracy in the mountains. Ready for around the world sailing adventure. Buy it if you see it.///////////////////////////////Nutnfancy Likability Scale: 7 out of 10 at pricing discussed///////////////////////////////For Dudio Music CD, TNP T-Shirts, Shell Casings, Collectibles, Surplus Gear watch www.nutnfancy.bigcartel.com/////////////////////// Also subscribe to "TheNutnfancyProject" alternate Channel in prep for gun media attacks by Google: [ Ссылка ]
"FN FNAR: Heavy Hitter, Accurate" by Nutnfancy
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