Kevster wrote:Wow!!! Beautiful piece!
Thanks!
Of course, the way things are going, you'll only be able to own sling-shots in a few years. Enjoy owning firearms while we can!
Seriously, cool replica. I've not invested any time to map out the particulars in creating vintage firearms, but it looks very well done. I know some of the history of the M-16 from my time in the US Army ('89-'93). I noticed the picture covered the third position option on the selector switch (as it should while on "safe").
I'm sure it's blank under there....
Enjoy!!!
Yes, it is blank under there. Some people have gone so far as to have the word "auto" engraved there, along with using an M16 selector switch that will physically move to the "auto" position (but still be semi-auto in that position of course). In some cases they have even made a mockup of an auto sear pin above the selector switch (usually by simply engraving a circle, but in some cases, drilling a shallow hole that doesn't go completely through and attaching a short section of a pin into it). Some people have had the Colt logo engraved on the side of the magazine well too (or Harrington & Richardson, or Hydra-Matic). I think taking it that far is risky. The people who enforce the law aren't necessarily gun experts (nor are they necessarily legal experts), and if they see the word "auto" on the side of your rifle which looks an awful lot like an M16, and especially if the selector switch will actually move to that position, who knows what would happen? Sure, you'd eventually be cleared when it's determined that your rifle is in fact semi-auto-only (ideally anyway, assuming the ATF doesn't trump up some "intent to construct a machine gun" charge on you), but who wants the hassle, or possibly even an arrest?
The U.S. shipped a load of new Colt-manufactured M16A1s to Israel in the 1970s, and they went into storage and stayed there until a couple of years ago, when they were completely disassembled and sold to dealers in the U.S. (minus the lower receiver of course). This presented a rare opportunity to build an M16A1 clone using new USGI Colt-manufactured parts all from a single gun.
Prior to this, if someone wanted to do this, they would have to scrounge [usually well-used] USGI parts from various sources, and then there was the problem of finding an appropriate lower receiver. Very few companies have ever made a semi-auto-only A1-style lower receiver, and the one or two options that were out there were hard to find, poor quality, and the wrong color (black rather than dark gray). So a lot of people ended up using A2-style lower receivers, which can be found anywhere, but are also the wrong color, and have the wrong design as well (though they are
functionally compatible). This results in a gun that looks like this:
Then Nodak Spud came along, a small 2-man operation in Minnesota, owned by an AR-15/M16 enthusiast and perfectionist. He started making various "retro" parts, all with amazing quality; perfect machining and fit & finish; tight tolerances and accurate dimensions. He also teamed up with the US Anodizing company to finish the parts in a color that matched the old Colt color (you can see in my pictures in my previous post that the color of the Nodak lower receiver is an excellent match to the color of the 1970s Colt upper receiver, which they call "XM Gray").
The Nodak lower receiver that I got was beautiful; perfect. Everything was a perfect fit and in perfect alignment. Colt themselves couldn't have done a better job.