Harrison S wrote:What are your opinions on the Alcor 223 vs the Chimera 223?... I believe they are both made in the same country.....similar quality???... I tend to lean towards the Alcor, simply because it's more my style of rifle . I dont believe the Chimera comes in timer, at least not that I've ever seen
They are basically the same thing, different brands and different guns, same idea.
What I don't like about the Chimera I fired was that if I tried to be fast, I'd get the hammer to follow the bolt and not fire the next round.
If I used the rifle like a semi auto I have, fire the shot and follow-through with the trigger by holding it back until the shot's gone, then relied on the reset to hold the hammer back, this made the rifle uncock in the Chimera.
hard to explain, but if I followed through with the trigger, then thumbed the forend release to chamber another round while I still had the trigger back, it uncocked itself and I'd have to jack the live round out of the de-cocked rifle and rechamber another one.
This seems to be a cheap, engineeringly-amateur way of ensuring the firearm cannot be made a semi-auto by removing the disconnector.
To me, that's unforgiveable.
I saw a video made by the creators of the Eureka, and they are doing exactly the same thing, leaving the disconnector (that stops the hammer following the bolt home) out, so it's impossible without a complete professional trigger group to make it into a semi auto. Crap amateurish design.
They also reckon their system is an improvement of the bolt/spring set-up of an AR-180 or AAA-SAR design, it's not. Yeah the bolt doesn't need the AR-style long spring/buffer running back into the buffer tube, which doesn't allow a folding buttstock. Big deal. It uses the same spring design as the SAR, yet they say it's revolutionary. FFS, do they think we have all never seen these superior firearms before?
Their design is not an improvement at all, it's amateur and cheap IMHO.
Sometimes, designers trying to get around laws come up with a design that nobody has thought up before, and is actually a great innovative design. In the Eureka, it's actually a shortcut and inferior. If something is made here, it should be superior in quality and design.