I am new to the AR platform. I bought a "cheap" AR-15 new and have added some upgrades to my liking (maybe not yours).
My question is...as I am changing parts and upgrading, is there a point where I am making a cheap rifle "shiny" but the lower or upper are crap and could fail before other parts. BTW I have 2000+ rounds through it and have had no problems.
Again, I'm new to the AR but like working on my guns myself so any help would be appreciated
I bought a 16" palmetto state armory freedom rifle from a friend that had never fired it. I added a low profile gas block and barrel length fore grip. I also installed a 3lb trigger.
I'll just be using it for target shooting, Just competing with myself.
I bought some cheap iron sights and a cheap red dot just to get started with. I will eventually upgrade those. There isn't much else I want to do. The upgrades I made were so I had as much distance between the iron sights as possible and the trigger was "crisper" and more predictable.
It seems well built and I haven't had any issues but I have nothing to compare it to.
PSA rifles are not bad at all, especially if you don't plan any serious use, such as putting it through a multi-day rifle class with 500 rounds fired per day. I am not sure why you think the upper and lower are crap. Just for comparison, the S&W M&P 15 Sport is in the same price range and does hold up in multi-day rifle classes.
I didn't mean to imply that the upper and lower were crap I was just using those parts as an example.
Ok, so if at some point I do decide to take a multi day course or train more seriously would you suggest upgrades or a replacement rifle? And if you suggest upgrades, which parts would be the most important?
I didn't mean to imply that the upper and lower were crap I was just using those parts as an example.
Ok, so if at some point I do decide to take a multi day course or train more seriously would you suggest upgrades or a replacement rifle? And if you suggest upgrades, which parts would be the most important?
Think about how much money you spend on "buying cheap and then upgrading" vs. on "getting the right gear in the first place". For serious use, buy once, cry once.