stealthman
New member
I've owned 5 poly lowers and have been around many more. The early plum lowers had issues with the receiver pins. That was fixed. The fit seems really nice and tight. However, I always swap out the poly receiver pins and poly trigger group for a mil-spec set. I prefer the feel of a trigger with metal edges and the pins have more flex than if like. The lower itself has proven plenty strong for my hunting. The only issue I've seen was on a buddy's rifle. Still not sure if the load was too hot, fired barely out of battery, or had a barrel obstruction, but the rifle blew up. Bull barrel split vertically from the chamber to 3/4 down, free float tube came apart, barrel nut cracked, upper receiver (aluminum) split, bolt split and carrier bent. The poly pin on the plum lower had the head sheared off from the expansion into the mag well. And the plum lower had a vertical crack on the front of the mag well, but the holes where the receiver pin held even though the pin had the head sheared off. Shooter was not hurt amazingly. Seeing how much damage happened in the metal parts of the upper and having all the gas from a split barrel funnel into the mag well and do so little relative damage to the poly lower made me a believer. I know there are weak points in the poly design, but they honestly take quite a beating before failing. I can't imagine treating my rifles in a way that would expose those weaknesses outside of combat. For the average hunter on a budget, they would be just fine. If you are in the habit of smashing and dropping your rifle regularly, buy the strongest one you can find. Lots of guys hunt with rifles with pretty wood stocks that are damaged much easier than polymer and never have an issue. It's all in how you treat your guns.