.308/7.62x51 SHTF Rifle

marksman8351

New member
I have a vast variety of firearms in my collection but recently ive been looking into a 308/7.62x51. Currently I have an AR15 Mini14 an AR15-22 and a variety of shotguns and handguns. In the area where i like and a few counties surrounding you arent even allowed to hunt with anything but a shotgun/bow/crossbow so im seriously considering a 308/7.62x51 SHTF tactical style rifle that i could use for hunting too. Ive been looking at something like the Kel Tec RFB because i am a left handed shooter and it would be nice not to worry about brass in my face. (BTW my AR15 is left handed and my mini has a beastly deflector on it). So i was wondering what kind of rifle anyone here would recommend i really like the bullpup design and the 1200 price tag on the rfb but dont know too much about it... i was also considering a FAL clone because i see how far foward on the rifle the ejector is and i heard alot of the FAL's design is left hand friendly. So any recommendations or information on the RFB or something that matches what i like is greatly appreciated.
 
btw im a big fan of keeping my rifles american but im open to suggestions . Besides my duty weapons all of my guns are american and i would ideally like to keep it this way although i am a big fan of the FN SCAR and FAL and pretty much anything FN and other fancy guns of that sort. The only american gun im keeping out of the question is the M1A only because ive designed my mini14 to pretty much clone one e/c that its in .223/556
 
Narrow your search

There are lots of options for you but you should narrow it down a bit.

What's your price range?

What is your intended engagement range?

Will you mount a scope or other optic?

Are you looking for magazine fed semi auto or a solid bolt action?
 
You can not go wrong with the FAL! I have one and I shoot it LH a lot. We sometimes up the contest by makeing it weak hand only. I'm a huge fan of the FAL. Another option is to look at an AR10. Not sure if anyone makes a LH model though.
 
M1A is the way to go, scout model sounds like a good fit for you, but there are lots of configurations to choose from. Few other rifles are generally considered as reliable and user-friendly.

Pick up a copy of Bostons Gun Bible before you spend your dough on a .308.
He compares the various .308s of the world in a variety of ways that answers all your questions and some others you haven't thought of.

If you cant afford an M1A now, keep saving till you can.

BTW, Im a lefty, the M1A controls feel natural.
 
I have three M1A rifles, and that is what I would choose in a time of crisis.
My favorite is this Springfield Loaded, with a Leupold 1.5-5X scope.
M1A.jpg
 
FAL's do NOT necessarily chew up brass. There are two things that need to be addressed and adjusted to keep the brass dings off of the receiver and the brass from being brutalized. They are the gas port adjustment, a very easy no takedown adjustment that you can do "on the fly". The gas adjustment is to allow for different pressures produced by different ammo. The other is the ejector. It is a little harder to do, but once done it is forever. You'll need an FAL manual or someone that has done this before to get it right.
 
I would like to have several semi-autos in the 308,of course the MIA and a Armalite would be sweet to add to the safe.
The only semi-auto 308 I have is a DPMS LR308AP4 Carbine purchased 6 years ago,for a carbine it's a unbelievably accurate little brush gun"Hell on Whitetail" :D

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Someone's got to explain the whole Ruger "scout rifle" thing to me.

First, the stock in black & white laminate is ugly. I own wood, and I own plastic/synthetic. Wood is for beauty, synthetic is for all-weather use. Laminate is for cheap furniture.

Second, why a bolt and 16.5" barrel no less in a "tactical" weapon? Aside from the overuse of the term "tactical" (its gotten to the point where if I see the word "tactical" in a product description I assume its a bad product they are trying to move, sort of like the "catch of the day" in Red Lobster which is really the fish that's 3 days old they are trying to move before it smells too bad).

I think Ruger has actually made great strides since the old man left, and am inclined to look at Ruger first if I'm in the market, but the scout rifle looks like a bad idea best left to fade away.
 
UpstateGlocker said:
First, the stock in black & white laminate is ugly. I own wood, and I own plastic/synthetic. Wood is for beauty, synthetic is for all-weather use. Laminate is for cheap furniture.

I guess beauty is in the eye of the beholder. It doesn't look to bad to me. Laminate is generally more stable than solid wood and it's probably stronger than any other common stock making material, short of a full length metallic chassis. While a synthetic stock may seem more applicable to such a utilitarian rifle, synthetic stocks tend to be either super cheap hollow plastic garbage or expensive composite. They probably didn't want to go the super cheap plastic route, and they probably wanted to keep the price point as low as possible, so laminate was likely their best option.

Second, why a bolt and 16.5" barrel no less in a "tactical" weapon? Aside from the overuse of the term "tactical" (its gotten to the point where if I see the word "tactical" in a product description I assume its a bad product they are trying to move, sort of like the "catch of the day" in Red Lobster which is really the fish that's 3 days old they are trying to move before it smells too bad).

And where is Ruger marketing this as a "tactical" rifle? I skimmed their site and "tactical" never really came up in reference to their scout rifle. The purpose of the bolt and 16.5" barrel is to keep it short and simple. Scout rifles aren't meant to be tactical, they're intended to be small and quick handling, qualities not exclusive to HSLD crowd.
 
The Scout Rifle is Col. Cooper's pet project

The late Col. Jeff Cooper explains the Scout Rifle concept (which some believe Ruger didn't get quite right with their Gunsite Scout Rifle) in his book "To Ride, Shoot Straight, and Speak the Truth", which should be recommended reading anyway. He also thought the rifle should be used with a short, low-power, forward-mounted scope and a CW or Ching Sling.

As to the G-1 (sporterized FAL), I'm a big fan. It's pretty "southpaw friendly" and, after all, the FN-FAL (Fusil Automatique Leger, or Light Automatic Rifle) has been the MBR of more than 30 countries. If I had to bug out with only one long gun, I'd be torn between my G-1 and my Mini 14; I love 'em both. It's a bear to lug around .308 ammo but it's a real flat-shooting, hard-hitting round.
 
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+1 for Boston's Gun Bible, great reading for everybody who is not afraid to contemplate needful action and practical equipment. There aren't any books I would accept as Gospel aside from the Word itself, but Boston's Gun Bible and Atlas Shrugged are up there.
 
Ruger Scout

The Ruger Scout got a nice writeup in the new "American Rifleman".
A "scout" was intended as a GP rifle, as proposed by COOPER, as already noted.

The use of laminate allowed a simple solution to adjustable length of pull. To get same in a synthetic design would have required a more complex arrangement (in synthetic) than Ruger wanted to do. Or so says the article.
The barrel is short so as to meet the spec's as proposed by Cooper, and allow same to be handy and portable.

The only other affordable factory scout is the Savage version. To me, Rugers version is more nicely done than the Savage, but since my Savage is paid for, and tweaked to my liking, I doubt I'll switch.

A manual (bolt) is not a bad idea for a worst case/GP rifle. Lighter, high reliability, fewer parts........semi auto fire and high mag cap are not necessities in my book.
 
tactical style hunting rifle

marksman8351 said:
"...a 308/7.62x51 tactical style rifle that i could use for hunting too"...
I've taken this rifle hunting for the last 3 years. It's slightly heavier than my bolt gun, but considering the amount of stuff in my daypack the difference in total weight is negligible:

http://www.remington.com/products/firearms/centerfire/model-r-25/model-r-25-rifle.aspx

My understanding is that the rifle design is a collaboration between Remington and DPMS.
 
BTW -

marksman 8351,

Request that a mod change the title of your thread to remove the "SHTF" if you want your thread to remain open.

"SHTF" is against TOS for this board.

just sayin'
 
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