Lost_River
New member
This particular carbine has been an evolution.
It started as a build specifically to hunt coyotes. I used to do a bunch of coyote hunting, as I had a lot more free time than I do now. My style of hunting was making multiple sets (usually 10-20 minutes on a set) before moving 2, 3,5 miles down the road. I would often make 7-10 sets in a day.
It initially looked like this:
The rifle has a White Oak Armament 16" 7 twist barrel, and is optimally designed to shoot 77 grain SMKs. The barrel was an SPR barrel that I had turned down to what was essentially an old Colt "pencil" lightweight profile. The fore-end is a Clark carbon fiber tube. I chose this for both the weight savings, as well as the fact that in the extreme cold, it is much nice to handle than metal. Plus since I don't shoot long strings of fire with this there was not reason to have a bunch of cooling vents or holes. I rarely ever shoot more than 5 rounds in a minute with this rifle, so barrel heat is really a non issue.
All the internal parts are factory Colt Defense, except the trigger. The lower that is now on it is a Geissele 2 stage, which is the best trigger I have ever used.
Eventually the optic was switched, as the ACOG went to my other Colt, and the carbine now wears a 2.5-8 Leupold. This particular Leupold has been setup specifically for shooting 77 grain SMKs/MK262. MK262 is the military 5.56 precision load for their SPRs and is used a bunch with special mission units, as it has shown to be exceptionally accurate, as well as have excellent terminal ballistics on live targets.
Back to the optic:
It is mounted in a lightweight Aero mount.
Sorry the pic is a little out of focus. Anyways, I sent to scope into the custom shop. It is setup with a BDC dial. Out to 500 yards, you simply turn the dial to the correct yardage and press the trigger.
The 2.5-8 give me a little more flexibility than the straight 4X, and I prefer the added magnification.
More to follow..

It started as a build specifically to hunt coyotes. I used to do a bunch of coyote hunting, as I had a lot more free time than I do now. My style of hunting was making multiple sets (usually 10-20 minutes on a set) before moving 2, 3,5 miles down the road. I would often make 7-10 sets in a day.
It initially looked like this:

The rifle has a White Oak Armament 16" 7 twist barrel, and is optimally designed to shoot 77 grain SMKs. The barrel was an SPR barrel that I had turned down to what was essentially an old Colt "pencil" lightweight profile. The fore-end is a Clark carbon fiber tube. I chose this for both the weight savings, as well as the fact that in the extreme cold, it is much nice to handle than metal. Plus since I don't shoot long strings of fire with this there was not reason to have a bunch of cooling vents or holes. I rarely ever shoot more than 5 rounds in a minute with this rifle, so barrel heat is really a non issue.
All the internal parts are factory Colt Defense, except the trigger. The lower that is now on it is a Geissele 2 stage, which is the best trigger I have ever used.
Eventually the optic was switched, as the ACOG went to my other Colt, and the carbine now wears a 2.5-8 Leupold. This particular Leupold has been setup specifically for shooting 77 grain SMKs/MK262. MK262 is the military 5.56 precision load for their SPRs and is used a bunch with special mission units, as it has shown to be exceptionally accurate, as well as have excellent terminal ballistics on live targets.
Back to the optic:
It is mounted in a lightweight Aero mount.
Sorry the pic is a little out of focus. Anyways, I sent to scope into the custom shop. It is setup with a BDC dial. Out to 500 yards, you simply turn the dial to the correct yardage and press the trigger.

The 2.5-8 give me a little more flexibility than the straight 4X, and I prefer the added magnification.
More to follow..