Especially if you use subsonic or lower-grained ammunition so it’s even less ear breaking, I honestly think more ammunition companies should start making more subsonic ammunition.
Good attitude toward hearing protection. I have an uncle who was born in the late '40s who has been a hunter and shooter his whole life. When he started shooting hearing protection wasn't a thing. I don't know when he started using protection, but it was too late. He can hear conversation if it's in a quiet room and you're right in front of him. In a restaurant he can't understand a word.
I have the same problem for the same reason. What's really bad is the way it managed to sneak up on me. Volume isn't a problem. I can hear at normal conversation levels. I just can't discriminate sounds from multiple sources. A barking dog or passing truck turns whatever is being said into "gargle gurgle blurg".
I have similar issues with no hearing damage. It can be a sign of (Central) Auditory Processing Disorder (C)APD, sometimes confused with or compounded with Dyslexia. There's not a lot you can do about it, but learning about it might help with coping strategies.
Another reason for the high rate of twist - you've got a really long bullet. Long bullets need more RPM to fly stably. It's also subsonic, less velocity means less RPM for a given rate of twist. So to get the RPM up to the needed value you need a greater rate of twist. The fact that the rifle is a bolt action came as a surprise.. up to that point I thought it was another AR.
Exactly. People seem to think that faster twists are necessitated by heavier bullets, but that is only partially true. A heavier bullet for a given diameter will of course have to be longer, but the same physics also apply to long and light bullets like tracers.
Still doesn't need to be as fast as it is just to stabilise the bullet, they're only pushing it so far because they're committed to the idea that spinning the bullet faster lets it carry more kinetic energy without breaking the sound barrier.
@@agentoranj5858 after looking at some of the testing by Fostek and Discrete Ballistics, I would hardly call that an "idea." It appears that there is definitely greater wounding potential when a heavy bullet with higher spin rate hits the target. This is not a new idea, though.
@@jackburton7959 I would agree but I think you would have to design a bullet to take advantage of it. The faster twist isn't going to do much for your standard fmj round.
Hearing Ian use words like "dongle" and "dingus" in such a calm and confident manner to describe trigger parts absolutely made my day 😂 I'm also very glad he made a video about this rifle, seems to me Q's engineers really try to think outside the box without being too over-the-top about it, despite that they may be one of the "Apple brands" of the firearms world, I do appreciate the ingenuity and obviously Ian seems happy with the performance given its purpose!
on one hand i dont like the proprietary nonsense. on the other. the execution is superb they really spent the time and tallent where it counts in design and it shows. truly what I would call the new standard in modern rifle design
Q is fake and a poser. The 300blk was a fluke and if you scale up .223 to .308 for 300blk then go to 308win and scale it up to 375 raptor is a closer comparison
Kind of disappointed they didn't go with "Tip" for the rifle name. Because not only would that make it "the Q Tip", but also because no matter what kind of hunting or survival situation you're facing, you could always go in with just the Tip.
Ian, the rearward motion on the bolt handle for extracting a cartridge from the chamber is found in the Blaser R93 and R8 rifles which have been out for some time. The guiderails are also found on the Blaser rifles. So I am sure Q took some inspiration here.
Merkel is a good one, not a straight pull but oridnary bolt. But it struck out,due to R93 and R8 . It looks so much like one this one . All needed is a swap barrel like the others have . Similar barrel swap system on them
@@squidwardo7074 The case is much shorter. There are images about showing how the Blackout's bullet ogive sits in almost the same place as the 5.56's case shoulder in the chamber, so it'll chamber fine. If the same can occur with the 8.6mm in the 7.62/308 chamber, that's a similar degree of problem.
31:00 Knowing Q, they’ll take you’re feedback on the electrical tape and come up with a silicone wrap, name it something exotic and charge $65.99 for it. 😂
I am 81 and got my first antelope at 13 with a 30.30, although mostly hunted with a 30.06. Boy, has "hunting" changed. A box of ammo would normally last 4 or 5 years. I generally used a 180g Silvertip, which had no problems taking down deer and elk, and have never owned a new rifle. Of course, I hunted to put meat in the freezer, as did my father before me and the guys I hunted with. The idea of spending $3,500 on just the gun would have seemed fantastic to us. The gun Ian showed is science fiction to me. Why you would need a 20 round magazine and a suppressor plus a folding stock is beyond me. Still, I love this channel. It's interesting to see old guns and how much hunting has changed since the "old days".
Ian explained all the reasons why you might want a folding stock and even moreso a suppressor - the latter being so that you don't get hearing damage, old man 😉 Honestly, I was kind of expecting you to go into how protecting your hearing was wise, because all of those years of shooting had taught you a lesson in that regard 😊
Man I didn't realize what a seriously innovative rifle this was. Q's colors may be a little funky but man this is really something else. They put thought into this. That bolt is seriously fancy.
@@zarnold1995makes me wonder how well the VSS Vintorez would perform as a hunting rifle to Ian’s requirements. It at least fulfills his subsonic ammo requirements with 9x39 and its quiet.
Speaking of hearing, your new microphone sounds much better. It no longer has the subtle (or not so ) distortion the old one had for many years. Jolly good show I say!
I dont hear difference. Also this is big channel, and its 2023, there is no valid reason for Ian to not record and upload in 4k already. Or at least in 60 fps. See how bad it looks at 0:55
@@Marcin206pl As much as I'd like to disagree with you, you have a very good point. Even if it just means the quality of the historical footage will be higher, on that merit alone.
100% agree with you about hearing protection Ian. I'm 40 and have severe hearing damage/loss from my time in the military. I was an Infantryman for 11 years. During training we always wore ear pro, however during live fire training and during deployments we did not wear ear pro because of the need for communication. Have 90 percent hearing loss in my left ear and 40 in my right. If i could go back in time i would have worn the electronic ear pro with built in comms. Yes it was awkward and annoying but I (and several others I served with) very much regret not wearing ear pro. Especially looking back on it now being basically deaf in one ear and only being 40 is a bummer. Considering we had the option for electronic ear pro that worked with our communication devices is a very stupid decision. FOLKS I PLEAD WITH YOU, USE EAR PRO!! YOU'LL REGRET NOT USING IT AS YOU AGE.
Fuck Tarkov, its made by pro-Putin fascists. Though, this gun's still dumb anyway because of being too complex for what it is. Although its very light which is great for what its designed for, but it can be even lighter and cheaper if the handguard and stock were more simple shapes or if it weren't modelled off the AR15 lol
I can see exactly why you chose this gun Ian, it's a clever piece of engineering and does the job you want it to do very well. The people who designed it clearly gave the design a great deal of thought.
Greetings from south central BC, thanks for another fine video sir. About 40 years back a buddy and I talked about building a folding stock, short barreled rifle with a reliable QD scope mount for chasing mulie bucks up in some steep local canyons. When I saw that rifle it reminded me of our project which never came to fruition. Suppressors make so much sense, but we're not holding our breath for using them up here - unfortunately. All the best.
Yeah, your "King" Trudeau thinks that suppressors are ONLY for nefarious deeds like assassinations. Same thing here in the USA. Good luck with Firearms Rights!
For me, this was probably the most interesting video from Forgotten Weapons. It had a lot of your personal opinions and it was in itself a really interesting weapon mechanically and full of interesting solutions, and flaws that can be imporoved. Thanks a lot for showing this weapon. Best vid so far, but it can only get better!
Is it possible that they were testing with a different magazine model which has slightly different clearances? I'm not a real gun guy so I'm not sure how much variation there is in fit between those "standard" magazines.
Oh wow, that slot on the cross pin on the firing pin so that you can turn it around to line up properly so you can put the striker in properly is genius. It's the little things like that that really make it seem like someone cares when designing it.
the other nice thing about using a standard mag is that you end up with less complaints. if people have to modify their mags then some people will do it right, others will do half a job. thats a big issue with mags because as you've said before mags are a very important part of making a firearm reliable. if bubba is going round with his dremel modifying people mags for your new shiny cartridge and as per usual he does a bad job then people are going to think that your cartridge is the problem
I'll be 35 in June. My ears sound like cicadas all the time from my hearing damage. Raves, concerts and shooting with subpar or no hearing protection ruined me. I regret it all. I sleep so poorly. I'm in my living room at 4:12am. I work at 5. So I'm enjoying your video and even with my phone at maximum volume I can clearly hear my messed up tinnitus. The last really bad damage was accidently setting off a .357sig Glock 32 in my tiny condo while trying to set it on top of my safe. It was my carry gun at the time. I didn't have it all the way on the safe and it fell. It DID NOT go off from hitting the ground. The Glock fired because I rushed to grab it and in my haste I grabbed it wrong and my finger set off my super ridiculously light trigger. My left ear has never been the same and that was 2019. Since then I wear hearing protection for a everything.
I highly recommend putting some sounds like waves/running water and put it under your pillow. Helps me sleep. Also listen to a podcast or audiobook with a Bluetooth earbud in the less effected ear. Also run a fan. You got this and you ain’t alone dude
@@frenchfrey65 is putting a piece of blu-tac on your screen at the centre of the crosshair and then running around no-scoping headshots considered cheating? 🤔
My buddy has that same thermal scope. It is absolutely wild how well it works. Then again it should for the price lol. He also has been messing with 8.6 blackout and 338 spectra. Both really neat cartridges.
I am one of those guys who is young-ish and is legally deaf. If anyone wants to join the military, ALWAYS wear hearing protection. If people make fun of you so be it. Focus on your health whilst maintaining and learning your job.
unnecessary to shorten case to use longer heavier bullets, just seat the bullets deeper ; case size change done to create proprietary cartridge for monetary reasons only
First things first: the whole video was interresseting from beginning to the end! Thing, that catched me the most: ear protection. In my military time we were shooting the HK G3. Nato standard ammo. Beginners lesson at the range. I can ensure you: ONE bullet is enough to cause a trauma and ruin your ear for a lifetime!!! It's exactly the thing that happend to the poor guy next to me. He forgot to plug in the ear protection, shot a single round and BAM! - trauma. For the gun design: I'm absolutely with you in terms of weight and size. But, I'd prefer a design less open. While at the hunt, you're crouching through bushes, laying at the dirt, leaning to the trees... Every little piece of dirt, every tiny stick, every leave, bug or stupid squirrel will be catched by the open surface of your gun! ...it isn't even a matter of dexterity or clumsiness. It's just Murphy's Law. :-/
My favorite eccentric and odd product name from Q is the "D-Bag". A bright pink or blue discrete rifle bag that was obviously inspired and named after Q founder, Kevin Brittingham. I assume Kevin would find this joke amusing.
I've been around for a while and this is the first bolt-action bolt disassembly that I've seen on modern rifles. Thank you very much for your hard work. Amazing video!
I would like to see the 8.6 Blackout on the Sig M-5 Spear. More capable than 300 Blackout. Sig is huge on innovation and support 300 Blackout on a number of guns. Could be useful. Hopefully with a quick change barrel for the Sig 6.8, 7.62 NATO, and possibly 6.5 Creedmoor.
There is an analogous cartridge to the 8.6 Blackout for the 6.5 Creedmoor: The 6.5x47 Lapua. It gives up some envelope but allows the user to use much longer bullets while still fitting in a short action magazine. My current rifle project is likely to be chambered for 6.5x47. I think that my next rifle project will be something like this, however. I am using an Eliseo (Competition Shooting Stuff) chassis and a Borden action.
The 6.5x47 actually predates the Creedmoor by a couple years. Now that Lapua is making their own Creedmoor brass with small primer pockets the only real difference is that the Creedmoor has slightly more case capacity.
@@KyussTheWalkingWorm The 47 makes a lot of sense, for me anyway, since getting to a crazy long range is basically impossible unless I move. I had no idea about the Lapua Creedmoor brass. It sounds like basically they're .308 Palma brass with a different profile. That's probably very very good brass for the Creedmoor.
When I first heard about the 12" Fix in 8.6 BLK when Kevin first teased it several years ago, heck even the 16" 308, I saw this as a scout rifle replacement. If you only want one rifle, and you can stomach the cost, The Fix is an amazing choice.
Ian, once again, has taught me an impressive amount of information in such a clear, direct format and I just eat this stuff up. I now know so much more about the production & application of the 8.6 than ever. 5/5, highly recommend
21:02 Check out the American Rifle Company Archimedes action! It's an R700 Clone-style action with a lever-based primary extraction system like the Fix.
Got to use the Fix at a public event and run a decent amount of 8.6 through it, and boy, it's just one of those sort of dream/youtube guns you see that was such a blast to plink with, regardless how expensive the ammo was. I really find these appealing to the new gunowners that are ready to invest in a bit of a higher end recreational option.
Thank you Ian for the information about the casing.! I was in the in the swedish army 1986.. and my officers couldn't answer to me about the the casing v caliber..
Fascinating video mate. It does seem to be a cracking upgrade from the Scout BUT - for me, nothing beats the basic, utilitarian look of the Scout - iconic!
I know this channel is Forgotten Weapons, but I would love to see more vids about modern weapons like this as well... this is absolutely one of the best firearms vids I've ever seen... also, seems like the folks at Q thought through this really well... i'd love to see their take on an AR platform......
The design of the stock lockup reminds me of Cold Steel's blade lock on some of their knives. The lock is designed to be secure even after a lot of wear.
I've been saying for years that if Cooper was developing the scout rifle today, it would probably be a Fix with a light LPVO, like a Trijicon Accupoint, on it. Ian, I have found that the easiest way to fold the stock is to grab the pistol grip in the right hand, with your pinky under the bottom of the grip, place your thumb on the hinge, and squeeze it to pop the hinge loose.
Building my first bolt action for hunting and was originally looking at the 8.6 but had to go with 6.5 creedmoor cause I don’t have a suppressor big enough for the 8.6 yet. The 8.6 really cause my interest but was hoping it would get the interest it has been getting. Seems like an awesome round for hunting.
I’ve seen the bolt handle as a lever for primary extraction in some premium straight pull hunting rifles at a gun show recently, it was Blaser if I recall correctly. But again, it was a straight pull, so not too similar to this rifle, and it recocked the firing pin too if I’m not mistaken
Having used 6.5mm Swede with a 1 in 6.7" twist and solid copper bullets with skives at around 2600gps MV, I can attest that the centrifugal expansion into a 4 bladed blender blade like shape is a "thing". And that it does blender like things to soft tissues.
As far as the hunting and hearing protection thing goes, I haven't hunted in years but when I was hunting it was always cold as hell. And you were just sitting around. So I was wearing like two hats and sometimes a hood. So shooting without hearing protection was actually dramatically quieter than any earmuffs I'd ever used lol. Which partially just seems to be due to my biomechanics it seems almost impossible to get my eye behind an optic without earmuffs getting squished off, and foamies never seal correct in my right ear. Now I use those surefire things and they work pretty great!
@@scowler7200 yeah, I've tried most types. The trick for me seems to be just using a larger size in my right ear. Which definitely works but those ones never seal right in my left ear so then I have to open two packs and throw away half every time. So I just have several pairs of those rubber surefires around so it's pretty hard to be caught out
Q: we have an exorbitantly expensive gun using exorbitantly expensive ammo and the striker alone has more parts than an entire AR. Ian, for some reason: sounds great and not at all overengineered.
I really dig the aesthetics of this rifle. The cut down and skeletonized appearance with the blue accents give it a sporty, almost rally car kind of feel.
I'm surprised just how quiet the suppressor makes it. I expected it to be much louder even with suppression. Seems like a cool gun that I'm literally never going to be able to afford 😂
Q can fiz the magazine wobble in the short term with a shim on the front of the trigger guard, and in the long term by a small adjustment to the mould for the receiver. (Assuming that it's cast,which seems the most likely technique.)
the british BMS CAM rifle also does its primary extraction with a rearwards movement of the bolt handle and that was designed in the late 80s and based around an ar15 bolt
It's interesting, I've been talking to a friend about a blackout equivalent for .308. But my suggestion was always to use a custom bullet with a diameter of 10 or 11mm. Using a standard .338 projectile in a shortened case makes a lot of sense. Probably would also be absolutely brutal to shoot a near straight walled 10 or 11mm projectile recoil wise. I'll edit in a little extra info to explain the justifications behind a round like this. A really large subsonic round(with possibly a super variant like .300blk) could serve double duty as an AP and HP, somewhat like the AP 9x39 rounds. With an armor penetrating core being "pushed" by the heavy lead round around it. With the military being scared of near pears fielding massed armored infantry this would be a specialist cartridge to be fired out of short suppressed battle rifles. Really just a larger successor to .300blk.
@@seth094978 .45-70 doesn't have reliable loading magazines for semi auto usage, mostly due to it being rimmed. Although the video showed that my idea of a really large bullet also wouldn't work in unmodified 308 mags.
The Sig G150 rifle used a 10.6x33mm cartridge firing a 400-grain subsonic round at 315 m/s (1050fps). But that's literally a handloaded .41 Magnum round, not a true rifle cartridge.
There's already a larger equivalent of .300 BLK, it's called .375 Raptor and goes up to 450 grains. Compared to that, 8.6 BO is a bit skinny for a subsonic with a .308 bolt face.
I think you're looking for 450 Bushmaster. Awesome catridge, very usable and about 45-70 power levels with a 250gn .452 projectile (yes it uses commonly available pistol projectiles) running over 2000ft/s from a 16" barrel and feeds from 308 mags just fine. As for armoured usage, I wouldn't rely on subsonic stuff getting it done. Speed beats armour far more reliably. I've always been taught that if the first doesn't work drift upward for a high chest / neck / head shot where you are less likely to encounter armour.
I saw this tested against 3 blocks of ballistic gel laid in series. It zipped right through all of them like they weren't even there. Nice penetration but it was supposed to be an expanding round. They haven't really figured out the ammo for this yet beyond the standard FMJ. Its probably because of the crazy fast twist rate.
I never knew the rotational energy could be used to design better expanding bullets. I get it now that you say it but I've just never heard of it being considered before. I was an aircraft mechanic in the Air Force and have had hearing protection beaten into me. People.. you have 2 remote senses, eyes and ears... why on earth would you take a chance and hurt your hearing? It doesn't come back... Never shoot without hearing protecting (less a suppressor and subsonic) but you know what I mean... Shooting that is so crazy.. I've shot BB guns louder than that thing.. The ricochet sound is so pronounced because you're so used to hearing the big blast of the shot first then the "quite" ricochet. In this case the ricochet sounds so loud because there is no big bang.
As someone that developed life long tinnitus in one ear for merely shooting off a few rifle shots at a ranch when I was a teen, wear your damn hearing protection, people!
@@GMdrivingMOPARguy You're probably so used to your tinnitus you don't even notice it anymore. I didn't realize I had it until I took a break from shooting, didn't shoot a gun for five or so years compared to popping a couple hundred rounds off with handguns and shotguns every weekend. Didn't use hearing protection with shotguns/rifles, but did with handguns. Went to the hearing doctor after the break and I have moderate tinnitus. I'm 23. My old man, a lifelong hunter, had it, his old man, a Vietnam vet, had it, most of my uncles who were hunters had it. If you don't have it now, you will in the future if you keep it up. Your ears aren't any more resilient to loud noises than anyone else's.
I have a feeling that Jeff Cooper would approve of this rifle. I haven’t read Art of the Rifle in a while but I’m pretty sure the only major thing this doesn’t have is an integrated bipod since you have to add it after you buy it. But one of the things I don’t like about Styr’s Scout is their integrated bipod is really flimsy compared to most other after market bipods out there. I’m curious about the price difference too. Last I looked, Styr’s Scout was ridiculously expensive
A very cool little rifle! I feel like all the tiny little rollers in the cocking assembly are adding complexity and machining cost, and wonder if that's really worth the little bit of friction reduction and presumably reduced wear. I can also see them getting jammed up if some grit manages to work its way in there, (though they are reasonably well protected,) which could be a real PITA to fix. Pure speculation on my part though.
Personally, I thought those beautiful little rollers are exactly what set this Fix head-and-shoulders above anything else out there, because a silky-smooth bolt like that is the kind of thing that makes people shoot it once and decide that they NEED to own one... It's much like driving a BMW or a Mercedes-Benz for the first time after 20 years of driving Fords and GMCs -there's absolutely nothing at all wrong with a Ford or a GMC 🙂, but BMWs and Mercs just have that 'Special Something' 😊👍about the ride quality, the precision and the weighting of all the controls, the quality of the build and the materials that makes you think "Wow... I've worked hard all my life, and I think I deserve this..." and then you never buy another Ford or GMC again, no matter how good their new model is...
The penatration of that cartridge is something to behold I was watching garand thumb do a ballistics gelly test with it and at 150yds it went through 3 16" blocks of gelly so slick it was amazing. Not to mention the report is virtually non existent
A lot of interesting features in that bolt design. Now that I think about it I'm kind of surprised that there aren't more bolt action designs that fully shroud the bolt like that, all that really comes to mind are the dust and mud covers on World War era rifles.
Would probably have been a good idea to put steel inserts or helicoils in the top of the receiver for the picatinny rail. Not that people expect to take their rails off all the time, but it will absolutely wear out sooner than you'd like, being aluminum. I get it's an added expense that a lot of people won't have a problem with for years (and the Aluminum incl. the threads may even be coated or hardened after machining), but I've seen that exact thing fail so much my inner machinist is a bit traumatized and paranoid about it now.
Properly hardened Aluminum Pic rails have been used for many thousands of rounds and multiple scope changes over many years on the same rifle by the military without problem.
The rearward motion as primary extraction can also be found in the American Rifle Company "Archimedes" action. They use the bolt handle as a lever for primary extraction.
Yeah taper lock... Ford used sparkplugs with that on their V4 engine in europe. Was so fun to get the sparkplugs out. Crank nothing nothing snap! and your hand hits the exhaust owie..... :)
21:00 the BMS Cam rifle also does that, in it's case it's because it only has a 22.5° bolt throw, which is not enough for cam based primary extraction.
First thing I thought of myself when he said he hasn't seen something like that before. To be fair you could argue the Denel NTW-20 isn't just a hunting rifle...on the other hand you could also argue that an APC is just very big game.
The BMS CAM rifle has the same system, and it has been around since the late '80s. Bloke on the Range has a video about it. The American Rifle Company Archimedes action also has the same system...
Yep I'm 53 and pretty deaf from my time in the military, suppressors are the solution to a billion dollar problem.
Especially if you use subsonic or lower-grained ammunition so it’s even less ear breaking, I honestly think more ammunition companies should start making more subsonic ammunition.
Ya now go tell the atf that what morons
Percussion mitigation attachment
Thank God the NFA and the BATF are there to make everything safer for us!
66, shooter and drummer, with tinnitus. 😐
Good attitude toward hearing protection. I have an uncle who was born in the late '40s who has been a hunter and shooter his whole life. When he started shooting hearing protection wasn't a thing. I don't know when he started using protection, but it was too late. He can hear conversation if it's in a quiet room and you're right in front of him. In a restaurant he can't understand a word.
I have the same problem for the same reason. What's really bad is the way it managed to sneak up on me. Volume isn't a problem. I can hear at normal conversation levels. I just can't discriminate sounds from multiple sources. A barking dog or passing truck turns whatever is being said into "gargle gurgle blurg".
Have had that problem since birth, due to being born with just one ear.
I have similar issues with no hearing damage. It can be a sign of (Central) Auditory Processing Disorder (C)APD, sometimes confused with or compounded with Dyslexia. There's not a lot you can do about it, but learning about it might help with coping strategies.
Same problem here and i'm only 37
Mb he's not interested in conversation 😅 sorry for joking about that, I got the opposite issue - I think I hear too well
Another reason for the high rate of twist - you've got a really long bullet. Long bullets need more RPM to fly stably. It's also subsonic, less velocity means less RPM for a given rate of twist. So to get the RPM up to the needed value you need a greater rate of twist.
The fact that the rifle is a bolt action came as a surprise.. up to that point I thought it was another AR.
Exactly. People seem to think that faster twists are necessitated by heavier bullets, but that is only partially true. A heavier bullet for a given diameter will of course have to be longer, but the same physics also apply to long and light bullets like tracers.
clever
Still doesn't need to be as fast as it is just to stabilise the bullet, they're only pushing it so far because they're committed to the idea that spinning the bullet faster lets it carry more kinetic energy without breaking the sound barrier.
@@agentoranj5858 after looking at some of the testing by Fostek and Discrete Ballistics, I would hardly call that an "idea." It appears that there is definitely greater wounding potential when a heavy bullet with higher spin rate hits the target. This is not a new idea, though.
@@jackburton7959 I would agree but I think you would have to design a bullet to take advantage of it. The faster twist isn't going to do much for your standard fmj round.
Hearing Ian use words like "dongle" and "dingus" in such a calm and confident manner to describe trigger parts absolutely made my day 😂 I'm also very glad he made a video about this rifle, seems to me Q's engineers really try to think outside the box without being too over-the-top about it, despite that they may be one of the "Apple brands" of the firearms world, I do appreciate the ingenuity and obviously Ian seems happy with the performance given its purpose!
Those are technical terms! Lol
I was thinking that thingamabob and doohickey and whatitsname would be in there too.
on one hand i dont like the proprietary nonsense. on the other. the execution is superb they really spent the time and tallent where it counts in design and it shows. truly what I would call the new standard in modern rifle design
The boondoggles have all been removed tho 👍
Q is fake and a poser. The 300blk was a fluke and if you scale up .223 to .308 for 300blk then go to 308win and scale it up to 375 raptor is a closer comparison
Considering they’re called Q I’m half expecting their CEO to say “now pay attention 007” during all of their meetings
Special Operations Group.
Army of Northern Virginia.
The Q group.
Future proves past.
Or the earth is infested w ith lizard people.
ALL PATRIOTS GO, NOW
ATTACK
Or is it The Q from Star Trek? lol
@@SuperCulverin what?
Kind of disappointed they didn't go with "Tip" for the rifle name.
Because not only would that make it "the Q Tip", but also because no matter what kind of hunting or survival situation you're facing, you could always go in with just the Tip.
😂
Q should hire this man as marketing director
That should be the suppressor name
@@mrastleysghost
The Fix is in with just The Tip
I think he calls his 5in 50bmg "the Tip"...
Ian, the rearward motion on the bolt handle for extracting a cartridge from the chamber is found in the Blaser R93 and R8 rifles which have been out for some time.
The guiderails are also found on the Blaser rifles.
So I am sure Q took some inspiration here.
Q actually copied the action from the Merkel KR1.
@@CascadingDream I am not familiar with that one but that doesn't surprise me at all.
Also from the NTW-20.
Merkel is a good one, not a straight pull but oridnary bolt. But it struck out,due to R93 and R8 . It looks so much like one this one . All needed is a swap barrel like the others have . Similar barrel swap system on them
And a little bit of Newton Leverbolt this also have. Some guys that read up on things working.😊
This poses the obvious question, will 8.6mm chamber in .308 rifle and will it fire? 🤔
I have a feeling you could chamber it, firing seems slightly sketchy. I hope Ian gives you an answer.
@@Oblithian If it's able to fire it will definitely be a kaboom - that's why i ask :D
Reminds me of .300 blk in 5.56
how would it if .308 is 7.62 mm?
@@squidwardo7074 The case is much shorter. There are images about showing how the Blackout's bullet ogive sits in almost the same place as the 5.56's case shoulder in the chamber, so it'll chamber fine.
If the same can occur with the 8.6mm in the 7.62/308 chamber, that's a similar degree of problem.
@@squidwardo7074 they're referring to people blowing 5.56 rifles up chambering 300 blk
31:00 Knowing Q, they’ll take you’re feedback on the electrical tape and come up with a silicone wrap, name it something exotic and charge $65.99 for it. 😂
Yep!🤣
f4 tape gang for life
S
This thing looks like the survival rifle you'd find in your escape pod of a space ship.
I am 81 and got my first antelope at 13 with a 30.30, although mostly hunted with a 30.06. Boy, has "hunting" changed. A box of ammo would normally last 4 or 5 years. I generally used a 180g Silvertip, which had no problems taking down deer and elk, and have never owned a new rifle. Of course, I hunted to put meat in the freezer, as did my father before me and the guys I hunted with. The idea of spending $3,500 on just the gun would have seemed fantastic to us. The gun Ian showed is science fiction to me. Why you would need a 20 round magazine and a suppressor plus a folding stock is beyond me. Still, I love this channel. It's interesting to see old guns and how much hunting has changed since the "old days".
"Need" is always an incorrect question.
No one needs this rifle, they created it because they could, not because they should.
The question if need if asked relative to the purson asking it.
This gun allows you to be vewy vewy quiet while hunting wabbits
Ian explained all the reasons why you might want a folding stock and even moreso a suppressor - the latter being so that you don't get hearing damage, old man 😉
Honestly, I was kind of expecting you to go into how protecting your hearing was wise, because all of those years of shooting had taught you a lesson in that regard 😊
Man I didn't realize what a seriously innovative rifle this was. Q's colors may be a little funky but man this is really something else. They put thought into this. That bolt is seriously fancy.
If the factory colors bother you, spray paint is only a trip to Walmart away
The 6.5 fix is all gray and brown. Barrel swaps are easy
I wonder if they offer a more conservative color scheme. Not everyone likes funky color setups.
Deuteronomy says nun them queer colours on y'alls armaments gim brown or gun metal gobless
When in doubt, spray paint it, that way you get any color you could possibly like
This gun looks like a 'what if' where bolt actions remained the main line rifle after ww2
Absolutely perfect description!
Or just look at any modern military bolt action
Reminds me of a bolt action VSS Vintorez in a western chamber.
@@zarnold1995makes me wonder how well the VSS Vintorez would perform as a hunting rifle to Ian’s requirements. It at least fulfills his subsonic ammo requirements with 9x39 and its quiet.
This is a very pure video. It's just Ian talking about a weapon that he really likes for some very interesting reasons.
He was actually just trying to convince his wife he needed to replace his scout and realised at the end it would be a good video too
Speaking of hearing, your new microphone sounds much better. It no longer has the subtle (or not so ) distortion the old one had for many years. Jolly good show I say!
I'm still getting it. There's still some pop.
I dont hear difference. Also this is big channel, and its 2023, there is no valid reason for Ian to not record and upload in 4k already. Or at least in 60 fps. See how bad it looks at 0:55
@@Marcin206pl As much as I'd like to disagree with you, you have a very good point. Even if it just means the quality of the historical footage will be higher, on that merit alone.
Yeah just buy a Zoom F2, it's like $200 and records in floating point so you don't have to set gain. Set and forget audio
His mix still doesn’t sound great. But you’re not wrong either it’s better than it was.
100% agree with you about hearing protection Ian. I'm 40 and have severe hearing damage/loss from my time in the military. I was an Infantryman for 11 years. During training we always wore ear pro, however during live fire training and during deployments we did not wear ear pro because of the need for communication. Have 90 percent hearing loss in my left ear and 40 in my right. If i could go back in time i would have worn the electronic ear pro with built in comms. Yes it was awkward and annoying but I (and several others I served with) very much regret not wearing ear pro. Especially looking back on it now being basically deaf in one ear and only being 40 is a bummer. Considering we had the option for electronic ear pro that worked with our communication devices is a very stupid decision. FOLKS I PLEAD WITH YOU, USE EAR PRO!! YOU'LL REGRET NOT USING IT AS YOU AGE.
"What does this do over a regular bolt action."
It comes with all the after market parts you can put on a Remington 700 in Tarkov.
costs entirely too much
Fuck Tarkov, its made by pro-Putin fascists.
Though, this gun's still dumb anyway because of being too complex for what it is. Although its very light which is great for what its designed for, but it can be even lighter and cheaper if the handguard and stock were more simple shapes or if it weren't modelled off the AR15 lol
Even before I read the comments the Fix was giving me Tarkov vibes 👍
@@hoilst265 traitorous teenage troll action figure now includes special edition turn-coat with popped collar and piss-soaked surrender shorts.
>porkchop
I can see exactly why you chose this gun Ian, it's a clever piece of engineering and does the job you want it to do very well. The people who designed it clearly gave the design a great deal of thought.
Greetings from south central BC, thanks for another fine video sir. About 40 years back a buddy and I talked about building a folding stock, short barreled rifle with a reliable QD scope mount for chasing mulie bucks up in some steep local canyons. When I saw that rifle it reminded me of our project which never came to fruition. Suppressors make so much sense, but we're not holding our breath for using them up here - unfortunately. All the best.
Yeah, your "King" Trudeau thinks that suppressors are ONLY for nefarious deeds like assassinations. Same thing here in the USA. Good luck with Firearms Rights!
What? You mean you haven't handed your hunting rifles into our Beloved Leader? You wouldn't be thinking for yourself now, would you?
You guys haven't started pushing suppressors as a piece of safety gear?
Just make one lol
For me, this was probably the most interesting video from Forgotten Weapons. It had a lot of your personal opinions and it was in itself a really interesting weapon mechanically and full of interesting solutions, and flaws that can be imporoved. Thanks a lot for showing this weapon. Best vid so far, but it can only get better!
My buddy hunts with .338 lapua magnum. Shot once without ear pro and learned from it. Now walks around the woods with actives on his head.
what in the world is he hunting that requires the use of a .338
@@pixelbucket8884yeti
@@pixelbucket8884 id rather have half a deer in my yard than a whole deer in my neigbors.
@@pixelbucket8884 Moose mainly.
@@pixelbucket8884 those goddamn rabbits down here carry glock18
What a genius design. That makes the simple thing they did not realise to make the trigger guard thicker so the mag won't wiggle even more impressive.
Is it possible that they were testing with a different magazine model which has slightly different clearances? I'm not a real gun guy so I'm not sure how much variation there is in fit between those "standard" magazines.
Ian, the 'primary extraction by the bolt pivoting' system is also on the Denel NTW 20. I learned that from your video :)
I was hoping someone caught that too while watching.
Yep definitely
and it's on the british bms cam rifle
It is also used in the American Rifle Company’s Archimedes
Oh wow, that slot on the cross pin on the firing pin so that you can turn it around to line up properly so you can put the striker in properly is genius. It's the little things like that that really make it seem like someone cares when designing it.
the other nice thing about using a standard mag is that you end up with less complaints. if people have to modify their mags then some people will do it right, others will do half a job. thats a big issue with mags because as you've said before mags are a very important part of making a firearm reliable. if bubba is going round with his dremel modifying people mags for your new shiny cartridge and as per usual he does a bad job then people are going to think that your cartridge is the problem
I'll be 35 in June. My ears sound like cicadas all the time from my hearing damage. Raves, concerts and shooting with subpar or no hearing protection ruined me. I regret it all. I sleep so poorly. I'm in my living room at 4:12am. I work at 5. So I'm enjoying your video and even with my phone at maximum volume I can clearly hear my messed up tinnitus. The last really bad damage was accidently setting off a .357sig Glock 32 in my tiny condo while trying to set it on top of my safe. It was my carry gun at the time. I didn't have it all the way on the safe and it fell. It DID NOT go off from hitting the ground. The Glock fired because I rushed to grab it and in my haste I grabbed it wrong and my finger set off my super ridiculously light trigger. My left ear has never been the same and that was 2019. Since then I wear hearing protection for a everything.
I highly recommend putting some sounds like waves/running water and put it under your pillow. Helps me sleep. Also listen to a podcast or audiobook with a Bluetooth earbud in the less effected ear. Also run a fan. You got this and you ain’t alone dude
"What I liked about the Steyr Scout is the weight and functionality, as well as how lazy AWP camping is, especially on dust_2..."
this. also if someone dominates the map with a scout it really is more impressive
@@KillyBilly141 if someone dominates a game with a scout, chances are they're cheating.
I got a triple kill with the scout on Aztec three terrys crossing the bridge, double headshot also lol
@@frenchfrey65 is putting a piece of blu-tac on your screen at the centre of the crosshair and then running around no-scoping headshots considered cheating? 🤔
@@shastamcnasta2802I like your thinking with the blu-tac, but I have 2 short (5mm), very thin (
"trigger dingus lever" is now an official technical description term.
My buddy has that same thermal scope. It is absolutely wild how well it works. Then again it should for the price lol. He also has been messing with 8.6 blackout and 338 spectra. Both really neat cartridges.
I'd love to try out 338 razorback
@@TheFirstCurse1there’s tons of ppl using thermals for hunting hogs hat you can find all over TH-cam. It’s also been used in Ukraine and Afghanistan
I am one of those guys who is young-ish and is legally deaf. If anyone wants to join the military, ALWAYS wear hearing protection. If people make fun of you so be it. Focus on your health whilst maintaining and learning your job.
I enjoyed the aside into the ammunition very much.
unnecessary to shorten case to use longer heavier bullets, just seat the bullets deeper ; case size change done to create proprietary cartridge for monetary reasons only
@@jamesberry3230 not great to crimp on an ogive
@james berry if the bullet is seated too deep it will also cause accuracy issues because the bullet can yaw inside the case when firing
Today: Ian presents new rifle ‘cause he loves the design aspects.
Tomorrow: forgotten weapon, definitely.
First things first: the whole video was interresseting from beginning to the end! Thing, that catched me the most: ear protection. In my military time we were shooting the HK G3. Nato standard ammo. Beginners lesson at the range. I can ensure you: ONE bullet is enough to cause a trauma and ruin your ear for a lifetime!!! It's exactly the thing that happend to the poor guy next to me. He forgot to plug in the ear protection, shot a single round and BAM! - trauma.
For the gun design: I'm absolutely with you in terms of weight and size. But, I'd prefer a design less open. While at the hunt, you're crouching through bushes, laying at the dirt, leaning to the trees... Every little piece of dirt, every tiny stick, every leave, bug or stupid squirrel will be catched by the open surface of your gun! ...it isn't even a matter of dexterity or clumsiness. It's just Murphy's Law. :-/
My favorite eccentric and odd product name from Q is the "D-Bag". A bright pink or blue discrete rifle bag that was obviously inspired and named after Q founder, Kevin Brittingham.
I assume Kevin would find this joke amusing.
Sir, you are my far the most ELOQUENT and well-read firearms aficionado I've ever seen anywhere. You've got a great channel. Keep up the good work
Yup... ^THIS^ 😊👍
This is the first review of 8.6 BLK that goes into crazy nerdy details like those at 9:00 regarding the retaining rib diameter and angle.
Taper on the muzzle device will be self centering like a morse taper. Very cool.
Love Ian’s stance on hearing pro. Setting an awesome example for his viewers!
WHAT?
I've been around for a while and this is the first bolt-action bolt disassembly that I've seen on modern rifles. Thank you very much for your hard work. Amazing video!
I would like to see the 8.6 Blackout on the Sig M-5 Spear. More capable than 300 Blackout. Sig is huge on innovation and support 300 Blackout on a number of guns. Could be useful. Hopefully with a quick change barrel for the Sig 6.8, 7.62 NATO, and possibly 6.5 Creedmoor.
There is an analogous cartridge to the 8.6 Blackout for the 6.5 Creedmoor: The 6.5x47 Lapua. It gives up some envelope but allows the user to use much longer bullets while still fitting in a short action magazine. My current rifle project is likely to be chambered for 6.5x47. I think that my next rifle project will be something like this, however. I am using an Eliseo (Competition Shooting Stuff) chassis and a Borden action.
The 6.5x47 actually predates the Creedmoor by a couple years. Now that Lapua is making their own Creedmoor brass with small primer pockets the only real difference is that the Creedmoor has slightly more case capacity.
@@KyussTheWalkingWorm The 47 makes a lot of sense, for me anyway, since getting to a crazy long range is basically impossible unless I move. I had no idea about the Lapua Creedmoor brass. It sounds like basically they're .308 Palma brass with a different profile. That's probably very very good brass for the Creedmoor.
When I first heard about the 12" Fix in 8.6 BLK when Kevin first teased it several years ago, heck even the 16" 308, I saw this as a scout rifle replacement. If you only want one rifle, and you can stomach the cost, The Fix is an amazing choice.
Ian, once again, has taught me an impressive amount of information in such a clear, direct format and I just eat this stuff up. I now know so much more about the production & application of the 8.6 than ever. 5/5, highly recommend
never understood that round. now I understand why
So jealous. The 16" Q Fix chambered in 8.6 just released. You must have ordered your Porq Chop/Short Chop last year. So sweet though!!!
21:02 Check out the American Rifle Company Archimedes action! It's an R700 Clone-style action with a lever-based primary extraction system like the Fix.
As a kid who grew up playing with GI Joe's and making bullet and explosion noises, I really appreciate your ricochet noise at the end haha. Cheers!
Got to use the Fix at a public event and run a decent amount of 8.6 through it, and boy, it's just one of those sort of dream/youtube guns you see that was such a blast to plink with, regardless how expensive the ammo was. I really find these appealing to the new gunowners that are ready to invest in a bit of a higher end recreational option.
I wasn't expecting it to be so quiet! Thats incredible, love being able to see the sight picture too, what an impressive bit of kit!
I want to see what Henry at 9-hole can do with this rifle.
Thank you Ian for the information about the casing.! I was in the in the swedish army 1986.. and my officers couldn't answer to me about the the casing v caliber..
Sweden at this time (when I was in the army) use 7.62.. assault-rifle. And 9 mm close combat..
Fascinating video mate. It does seem to be a cracking upgrade from the Scout BUT - for me, nothing beats the basic, utilitarian look of the Scout - iconic!
Out of all my years, this is the most excited I’ve ever been for a rifle. The 8.6 Q Fix is the coolest rifle on the market.
I know this channel is Forgotten Weapons, but I would love to see more vids about modern weapons like this as well... this is absolutely one of the best firearms vids I've ever seen... also, seems like the folks at Q thought through this really well... i'd love to see their take on an AR platform......
Excellent little rifle and so quiet. Great video as always Ian .😊
American Rifle Company's Archimedes action uses the bolt handle as a lever for primary extraction. I believe they were the first to do so.
Didn’t the archimedes come out in 2019? The fix was 2016 or 17 I believe
it's also used on the british bms cam rifle and that was designed in the late 80s after the semi auto ban so i think that's the first
Fantastic review - loved the strip down and details of all the mechanicals!
Yup... ^THIS^ 😁👍
And that's what makes Forgotten Weapons the best channel ever, so thank you Ian 😊
The design of the stock lockup reminds me of Cold Steel's blade lock on some of their knives. The lock is designed to be secure even after a lot of wear.
I've been saying for years that if Cooper was developing the scout rifle today, it would probably be a Fix with a light LPVO, like a Trijicon Accupoint, on it.
Ian, I have found that the easiest way to fold the stock is to grab the pistol grip in the right hand, with your pinky under the bottom of the grip, place your thumb on the hinge, and squeeze it to pop the hinge loose.
Building my first bolt action for hunting and was originally looking at the 8.6 but had to go with 6.5 creedmoor cause I don’t have a suppressor big enough for the 8.6 yet. The 8.6 really cause my interest but was hoping it would get the interest it has been getting. Seems like an awesome round for hunting.
Definitely a cool rifle. I also like having a look at the hits on the paper a lot. I'd very much like to see this on every range video!
As someone who has tried to modify a Gen 3 40 round Magpul mag for 458 SOCOM modifying the internal structure of the magazine is absolute hell.
Woo! My favorite francophone mustache man with rare firearms!
I’ve seen the bolt handle as a lever for primary extraction in some premium straight pull hunting rifles at a gun show recently, it was Blaser if I recall correctly. But again, it was a straight pull, so not too similar to this rifle, and it recocked the firing pin too if I’m not mistaken
yeah the blaser r8 does do that
Having used 6.5mm Swede with a 1 in 6.7" twist and solid copper bullets with skives at around 2600gps MV, I can attest that the centrifugal expansion into a 4 bladed blender blade like shape is a "thing". And that it does blender like things to soft tissues.
As far as the hunting and hearing protection thing goes, I haven't hunted in years but when I was hunting it was always cold as hell. And you were just sitting around. So I was wearing like two hats and sometimes a hood. So shooting without hearing protection was actually dramatically quieter than any earmuffs I'd ever used lol.
Which partially just seems to be due to my biomechanics it seems almost impossible to get my eye behind an optic without earmuffs getting squished off, and foamies never seal correct in my right ear. Now I use those surefire things and they work pretty great!
I have that same problem. Have you tried 3M foamies?
@@scowler7200 yeah, I've tried most types. The trick for me seems to be just using a larger size in my right ear. Which definitely works but those ones never seal right in my left ear so then I have to open two packs and throw away half every time.
So I just have several pairs of those rubber surefires around so it's pretty hard to be caught out
Q: we have an exorbitantly expensive gun using exorbitantly expensive ammo and the striker alone has more parts than an entire AR.
Ian, for some reason: sounds great and not at all overengineered.
guess you're deaf as well as being illiterate huh
Uberengineered
Great content! American Rifle Company has two actions that have a pivoting bolt handle for primary extraction.
I really dig the aesthetics of this rifle. The cut down and skeletonized appearance with the blue accents give it a sporty, almost rally car kind of feel.
i literally waited YEARS for the 8.6 blackout. i was so happy when it finally dropped.
The Denel NTW-20 has the same primary extraction method. It uses the bolt handle itself as a pivot to increase leverage; just on a much larger scale
I'm surprised just how quiet the suppressor makes it. I expected it to be much louder even with suppression. Seems like a cool gun that I'm literally never going to be able to afford 😂
Q can fiz the magazine wobble in the short term with a shim on the front of the trigger guard, and in the long term by a small adjustment to the mould for the receiver. (Assuming that it's cast,which seems the most likely technique.)
I highly doubt they cast their receivers. It's probably 5 axis cncd.
the british BMS CAM rifle also does its primary extraction with a rearwards movement of the bolt handle and that was designed in the late 80s and based around an ar15 bolt
It's interesting, I've been talking to a friend about a blackout equivalent for .308. But my suggestion was always to use a custom bullet with a diameter of 10 or 11mm. Using a standard .338 projectile in a shortened case makes a lot of sense. Probably would also be absolutely brutal to shoot a near straight walled 10 or 11mm projectile recoil wise.
I'll edit in a little extra info to explain the justifications behind a round like this.
A really large subsonic round(with possibly a super variant like .300blk) could serve double duty as an AP and HP, somewhat like the AP 9x39 rounds. With an armor penetrating core being "pushed" by the heavy lead round around it. With the military being scared of near pears fielding massed armored infantry this would be a specialist cartridge to be fired out of short suppressed battle rifles. Really just a larger successor to .300blk.
What about just downloading .45-70 a little? 405 grain bullets are already only 1400fps, so a bit more weight or less powder could work well.
@@seth094978 .45-70 doesn't have reliable loading magazines for semi auto usage, mostly due to it being rimmed. Although the video showed that my idea of a really large bullet also wouldn't work in unmodified 308 mags.
The Sig G150 rifle used a 10.6x33mm cartridge firing a 400-grain subsonic round at 315 m/s (1050fps).
But that's literally a handloaded .41 Magnum round, not a true rifle cartridge.
There's already a larger equivalent of .300 BLK, it's called .375 Raptor and goes up to 450 grains. Compared to that, 8.6 BO is a bit skinny for a subsonic with a .308 bolt face.
I think you're looking for 450 Bushmaster. Awesome catridge, very usable and about 45-70 power levels with a 250gn .452 projectile (yes it uses commonly available pistol projectiles) running over 2000ft/s from a 16" barrel and feeds from 308 mags just fine.
As for armoured usage, I wouldn't rely on subsonic stuff getting it done. Speed beats armour far more reliably. I've always been taught that if the first doesn't work drift upward for a high chest / neck / head shot where you are less likely to encounter armour.
I hope Q sees this and sends you one of everything because your video will sell more then all theirs
I love seeing anything that's had that extra little bit of thought into it regardless of what the thing is, this is definitely one of those 🥰👏👏
Ian, I hope you are saving all that brass and reloading it. I have built both an AR10 and a Remington 700 based 8.6 and I am loving them.
The other benefit of Q-Sert is the mounting points don’t go under the hand guard, so you need less overall diameter.
I saw this tested against 3 blocks of ballistic gel laid in series. It zipped right through all of them like they weren't even there. Nice penetration but it was supposed to be an expanding round. They haven't really figured out the ammo for this yet beyond the standard FMJ. Its probably because of the crazy fast twist rate.
Knowing Ians taste for peculiar and one-of-a-kind French rifles, it makes sense that his hunting rifle is also something I have never heard of…
21:05 I remember a big modern antitank rifle with several different cartridge options that you reviewed a few years ago with the same system.
I never knew the rotational energy could be used to design better expanding bullets. I get it now that you say it but I've just never heard of it being considered before.
I was an aircraft mechanic in the Air Force and have had hearing protection beaten into me. People.. you have 2 remote senses, eyes and ears... why on earth would you take a chance and hurt your hearing? It doesn't come back... Never shoot without hearing protecting (less a suppressor and subsonic) but you know what I mean...
Shooting that is so crazy.. I've shot BB guns louder than that thing.. The ricochet sound is so pronounced because you're so used to hearing the big blast of the shot first then the "quite" ricochet. In this case the ricochet sounds so loud because there is no big bang.
When you were listing the advantages of a compact rifle my Alaskan brain added “…of if you’re squeezing into a two seater bush plane” 😂
The primary extraction mechanism reminds me a lot of the NTW-20.
As someone that developed life long tinnitus in one ear for merely shooting off a few rifle shots at a ranch when I was a teen, wear your damn hearing protection, people!
@@GMdrivingMOPARguy You're probably so used to your tinnitus you don't even notice it anymore. I didn't realize I had it until I took a break from shooting, didn't shoot a gun for five or so years compared to popping a couple hundred rounds off with handguns and shotguns every weekend. Didn't use hearing protection with shotguns/rifles, but did with handguns. Went to the hearing doctor after the break and I have moderate tinnitus. I'm 23. My old man, a lifelong hunter, had it, his old man, a Vietnam vet, had it, most of my uncles who were hunters had it. If you don't have it now, you will in the future if you keep it up. Your ears aren't any more resilient to loud noises than anyone else's.
I have a feeling that Jeff Cooper would approve of this rifle. I haven’t read Art of the Rifle in a while but I’m pretty sure the only major thing this doesn’t have is an integrated bipod since you have to add it after you buy it. But one of the things I don’t like about Styr’s Scout is their integrated bipod is really flimsy compared to most other after market bipods out there.
I’m curious about the price difference too. Last I looked, Styr’s Scout was ridiculously expensive
Well q also tends to charge out the ass so it's not much better.
Bout 3300 without the can
One of the coolest rifle set ups I’ve ever seen. Good job Ian
A very cool little rifle! I feel like all the tiny little rollers in the cocking assembly are adding complexity and machining cost, and wonder if that's really worth the little bit of friction reduction and presumably reduced wear. I can also see them getting jammed up if some grit manages to work its way in there, (though they are reasonably well protected,) which could be a real PITA to fix. Pure speculation on my part though.
Personally, I thought those beautiful little rollers are exactly what set this Fix head-and-shoulders above anything else out there, because a silky-smooth bolt like that is the kind of thing that makes people shoot it once and decide that they NEED to own one...
It's much like driving a BMW or a Mercedes-Benz for the first time after 20 years of driving Fords and GMCs -there's absolutely nothing at all wrong with a Ford or a GMC 🙂, but BMWs and Mercs just have that 'Special Something' 😊👍about the ride quality, the precision and the weighting of all the controls, the quality of the build and the materials that makes you think "Wow... I've worked hard all my life, and I think I deserve this..." and then you never buy another Ford or GMC again, no matter how good their new model is...
The penatration of that cartridge is something to behold I was watching garand thumb do a ballistics gelly test with it and at 150yds it went through 3 16" blocks of gelly so slick it was amazing. Not to mention the report is virtually non existent
I like how Garand Thumb demonstrated that the 8.6mm round still sounds like a freight train going down range compared to the .300 Blackout
Loved this video in particular, Ian! Seeing you all excited and get all giddy was particularly great! 👍 😃
A lot of interesting features in that bolt design. Now that I think about it I'm kind of surprised that there aren't more bolt action designs that fully shroud the bolt like that, all that really comes to mind are the dust and mud covers on World War era rifles.
Really enjoying the look and style points this rifle brings to the table. What a cool rifle!
Would probably have been a good idea to put steel inserts or helicoils in the top of the receiver for the picatinny rail. Not that people expect to take their rails off all the time, but it will absolutely wear out sooner than you'd like, being aluminum. I get it's an added expense that a lot of people won't have a problem with for years (and the Aluminum incl. the threads may even be coated or hardened after machining), but I've seen that exact thing fail so much my inner machinist is a bit traumatized and paranoid about it now.
Actually a fair point.
Properly hardened Aluminum Pic rails have been used for many thousands of rounds and multiple scope changes over many years on the same rifle by the military without problem.
The rearward motion as primary extraction can also be found in the American Rifle Company "Archimedes" action. They use the bolt handle as a lever for primary extraction.
Now they just need to make a .50 Blackout by putting a .50 BMG bullet in a .50 Beowulf case.
So cool. I remember Ian talking about this weapon a while ago, iirc. glad to see he got it.
Yeah taper lock... Ford used sparkplugs with that on their V4 engine in europe. Was so fun to get the sparkplugs out. Crank nothing nothing snap! and your hand hits the exhaust owie..... :)
21:00 the BMS Cam rifle also does that, in it's case it's because it only has a 22.5° bolt throw, which is not enough for cam based primary extraction.
Don't think its the exact same but that primary extraction method seems pretty similiar to the Denel NTW 20
First thing I thought of myself when he said he hasn't seen something like that before.
To be fair you could argue the Denel NTW-20 isn't just a hunting rifle...on the other hand you could also argue that an APC is just very big game.
The BMS CAM rifle has the same system, and it has been around since the late '80s. Bloke on the Range has a video about it. The American Rifle Company Archimedes action also has the same system...