i had been wanting to get a modern M1a and had my eye on a SOCOM 16 , started doing my due diligence on it and came across a thread that popped on a search that said that SAI utilize a fair amount of cast parts these days , is this true?
its a little off putting , thinking im tabling the ideaThey use a fair amount of cast parts, however the only ones I’d be concerned about are the parts in the trigger group. The hammer hooks in my experience are the weakest link.
there was, I was trying to get rid of it. End up just tossing it in the trash when no one wanted it 😔.Wasn't there a 16in barrel in the PX? If i remember it was extremely affordable. A stripped SAI receiver and a couple of LRBs new in box...
Nevermind apparently the socom barrel didn't sell. 40usd and it didn't sell?!
https://www.m14forum.com/threads/wts-socom-16-barrel-withdrawn.552965/?post_id=5088777#post-5088777
Those cast parts SAI uses fail and it’s very common for them to fail . For example there extractors , there hammers, triggers, the elevation knobs they use wear down and stop working. Show me a USGI part that wears out like thatI find it humorous that people here shun cast parts, as if they are glass or tissue paper.
In the AR world, cast parts are what you look for; and the only two forged steel parts on an AR are the least loaded parts in the entire design.
There were cast USGI hammers and safeties.
IMO, the poor online reputation of cast M14 parts can possibly be attributed to a batch of cast SAI M1A bolts from the early to mid-1980s that were not properly heat-treated, and a later batch of hammers, triggers and extractors that SAI used in the 2000-2001-200? era - after they largely ran out of USGI parts (at least form their standard rifles). Those 3 parts from 20-plus years ago seem to fail on occasion, resulting in all the pooh-poohing extrapolated to any/all cast parts. Of course SAI corrected the issue two decades ago, but you still see these threads pop-up from time to time…I find it humorous that people here shun cast parts, as if they are glass or tissue paper.