View Full Version : Bravo Company Rifles
I teach firearms for a living. I carry guns for a living. This is why my rifles are made by Bravo Company. (Shameless plug.)
http://www.bravocompanymfg.com/v/vspfiles/assets/images/filthy14_oct10.pdf
jerrymrc
10-27-2010, 17:44
Never would have guessed....... :)
bobbyfairbanks
10-27-2010, 17:54
I am a Big AR fan dont get me wrong but this was misleading. I thought it went 30000 with no malfunctions. Having parts replaced and the cleaning takes away from the badass of this. Still though impressive. My next upper is going to be a BC upper. Just becuase of all the great stuff I have heard about it. I have a Colt AR right now and it is amazing. In one day I shot 1500 silver bear through it no issues. All in all it has a little over 17000 through it right now. It doesnt group well anymore so it is going to be time to get a new upper. Hope the BC holds up to the rep!
hurley842002
10-27-2010, 18:05
Love my BCM upper, wish I could afford to run even a quarter of those rounds thru it.
Birddog1911
10-27-2010, 18:24
Bobby, I wonder if you're discounting how hard that rifle was run. That was run through multiple, multiple classes, mostly by students. Every class it ran through was most likely 1K+ rounds per class. Having just had a couple of parts replaced and cleaned, what, once? That's damned impressive.
Love my Recce 14, and my SPR will be a BCM MK 12. Shameless gun pron:
http://i264.photobucket.com/albums/ii190/Birddog4570/Aug2010005.jpg
argonstrom
10-27-2010, 19:36
Wow - Very cool, indeed.
The Extractor
10-27-2010, 19:42
Filthy 14 by now probably has about 37k through it and still chugging AFAIK.
Just posted on FB by BCM.
Bravo Company USA Bravo Company MID-16 rifle featured
on cover and inside Oct 2010 issue of SWAT Magazine.
Rifle is still in service with 39,000+ rounds.
Birddog1911
10-27-2010, 19:50
I can't help it; I found it a little sad when they said that they're going to retire it at the end of the year. Hell, I'll take the upper!
Just another pick; Zeke was fat and happy with dinner, and quite cooperative. You might also notice the simple mod I made with the XTM panels; I cut one in half so that I could have the front site fold all the way down, and no break between the AFG and the panels.
http://i264.photobucket.com/albums/ii190/Birddog4570/Oct2010082.jpg
Hitman 6
10-27-2010, 20:03
I can't help it; I found it a little sad when they said that they're going to retire it at the end of the year. Hell, I'll take the upper!
Just another pick; Zeke was fat and happy with dinner, and quite cooperative. You might also notice the simple mod I made with the XTM panels; I cut one in half so that I could have the front site fold all the way down, and no break between the AFG and the panels.
http://i264.photobucket.com/albums/ii190/Birddog4570/Oct2010082.jpg
Is that a lab/St Bernard mix? Oh yeah, nice rifle too [Beer]
Birddog1911
10-27-2010, 20:15
Naw, he's purebred. He's a retired show dog; they wouldn't certify his hips, and he wasn't good for show or breeding anymore, so we adopted him. He's a hell of a good dog.
jerrymrc
10-27-2010, 20:35
As a side note I give you Old Dirty. Put in service in 2003 now has over 15000 rounds of various .308 WITHOUT A CLEANING. I was there when the already broken gas piston spring broke again (was already in two pieces) binding up the piston. it was replaced and keeps running today. The rifle has only been stopped 2 times. Once for the above even though it had gone 4000+ rounds with the spring broken in half and once when the brass broke in half and part was left in the chamber. It is a metric Fal. Yes it has been lubed but that is it.
It will be in attendance next may down at the NRA whittington center at Falfest.
The owner is a friend of mine and this all started as a joke way back when it cost $300 to build a FAL and ammo was $129 per K. :)
...back when it cost $300 to build a FAL and ammo was $129 per K.
[Cry]
As a side note I give you Old Dirty. Put in service in 2003 now has over 15000 rounds of various .308 WITHOUT A CLEANING. I was there when the already broken gas piston spring broke again (was already in two pieces) binding up the piston. it was replaced and keeps running today. The rifle has only been stopped 2 times. Once for the above even though it had gone 4000+ rounds with the spring broken in half and once when the brass broke in half and part was left in the chamber. It is a metric Fal. Yes it has been lubed but that is it.
It will be in attendance next may down at the NRA whittington center at Falfest.
The owner is a friend of mine and this all started as a joke way back when it cost $300 to build a FAL and ammo was $129 per K. :)
Old Dirty,,forgot about that. I followed it closely on FALFiles.
Wish I still had my SAR-48 :(
KevDen2005
10-28-2010, 08:58
This thread makes me want another rifle and another lab.
Damn you guys!!!
2ndChildhood
10-31-2010, 13:55
OK, I read the article Roger linked to...
One thing caught my attention, the line that said "If your cleaning takes more than 10 or 15 minutes, then you are wasting your time on nonsense."
Well my cleanings always take longer than 15 minutes, somebody please tell me which part I'm doing is nonsense so I can get it done quicker.
Here's what I do;
-Separate the upper and pull out the CH and BCG.
-Run a solvent-wet bore brush through the bore and set it aside.
-Take apart the BCG.
-Clean the extractor with solvent, bronze brush and plastic scraper.
-Clean the bolt with same, plus pipe cleaner for the central hole and run the ejector pin up and down a dozen times while it's soaked in solvent.
-Scrape off the carbon buildup from the tail of the bolt, then brush it.
-Clean the firing pin with solvent, and bronze brush.
-Wipe down the cam pin, ejector pin and cotter pin.
-Clean the bolt carrier with brush, solvent, plastic scraper.
-Pipe cleaner, bore brush and solvent down the snorkel.
-Scrape out the carbon buildup from inside the carrier with an old screwdriver I rounded off on the grinder, then solvent and patch the inside.
-spray the trigger group with clp and poke around with patches.
-Use a chamber brush, solvent, patches and plastic pick on the chamber/lug area.
-clean out the inside of the upper with clp & patches.
-run the bore brush down the bore with solvent 6 times or so.
-Run a few patches through the bore alternate dry and solvent.
-Typically, the patches keep coming out dirty so I end up repeating the last 2 steps a bunch of times.
-put everything together and lube with clp as I go.
Thanks! -2c
Birddog1911
10-31-2010, 19:16
What he was alluding to was the way the military teaches it's people to clean a rifle until you can handle it with white gloves. Cleaning the bore too often with a standard cleaning rod will actually damage the barrel. From reading your methods, I personally think you're punching the bore too much. What sort of cleaning rod do you use? You have to be careful of the crown and the muzzle; that'll kill your accuracy.
We are supposed to clean these things?
I guess I should start doing that.
More here.
http://www.defensereview.com/the-big-m4-myth-fouling-caused-by-the-direct-impingement-gas-system-makes-the-m4-unreliable/
mikedubs
11-04-2010, 07:39
Jerry, that FAL is just disgusting! Makes me want to pull the trigger on one! Too bad you can't find .223 for 129 per 1K, much less .308[BooHoo]
What he was alluding to was the way the military teaches it's people to clean a rifle until you can handle it with white gloves.
^^^^THIS
I remember during boot how we would get smoked if our heavily used, 15-year old A2's would have a slight smudge...the armorers were none too happy. Thankfully I've learned since then that a clean oiled weapon is great, but every gun will have some carbon somewhere unless you completely strip it down each time you shoot. Don't kill yourself with cleaning!
Birddog1911
11-04-2010, 08:50
I couldn't believe my luck in Boot Camp. We're standing in line to receive our rifles for the first time. I'm watching a platoon in front of us getting beat up A2s. We get up there, and I'll be damned if they didn't open a brand new crate from Colt to start issuing ours! I qualified on a brand new M16A2! Oohh, it was pretty!
Troublco
11-04-2010, 09:26
I couldn't believe my luck in Boot Camp. We're standing in line to receive our rifles for the first time. I'm watching a platoon in front of us getting beat up A2s. We get up there, and I'll be damned if they didn't open a brand new crate from Colt to start issuing ours! I qualified on a brand new M16A2! Oohh, it was pretty!
I was the weapons custodian for our squadron for several years; before they went and updated to A2's, we had A1's that were from very early in the procurement. I had a several 2 digit, 3 digit, and 4 digit S/N's. Plenty still had the pickleforks on them. I had 4 that were so old they had green furniture. Almost none had been fired in that whole time. Then about 4-5 years ago they got converted to A2's. Since they spent the money on that, now they want to replace them with M4's. I'd rather have the A2 any day.
I've gotten to the point that I only use a (single piece coated) rod for detail cleanings, and the rest of the time I use a boresnake; and even then I go from the breech to keep anything out of the action.
mikedubs
11-04-2010, 19:37
We get up there, and I'll be damned if they didn't open a brand new crate from Colt to start issuing ours! I qualified on a brand new M16A2! Oohh, it was pretty!
Yeah, I got lucky like that once. I actually laid hands on a brand new A4 soaked in CLP; it was all mine, no Desert Storm hand-me-downs!...then I got out 3 months later [Cry]
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.3 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.