gyrfalcon wrote:Hmac wrote:That's actually never been the case. Noveske employees work at PacNor to turn out the blanks, the employees then clock out at PacNor and clock in at Noveske along with the barrel blanks, where they do the chambering and rifling in-house using proprietary technique designed by John Noveske. ........
I'm not a piston guy. Nothing wrong with the concept, but my old-school brain sees them as a solution in search of a problem. That being said...if I were going to buy an AR with a piston gas system, I would get a Huldra (you can see them at a Fleet Farm near you). I've seen them shoot and I know many of the principles in the company. It's an excellent rifle.
http://www.huldraarms.com/
I don't think what you're saying is correct. John Noveske worked for PacNor before he started Noveske Rifle Works. The companies are closely associated. I think John Noveske tries to spin it like his barrels are highly proprietary and made with pixie dust.
Huldra = Adams Arms if you don't want to get them through fleet farm.
So, all we have is your suspicion that John Noveske is being disingenuous despite his straightforward statements to the contrary as well as Noveske's longstanding reputation. I can't help your bias and won't bother to try. Noveske's reputation pretty much speaks for itself and isn't going to be changed by anything that you or I might say here on this consumer-oriented general firearms forum. Any given rifle company can turn out good rifles and bad rifles. The odds of getting a good one that is both reliable and accurate are substantially greater with companies with higher QA standards like Noveske, BCM, DD, Colt than they are with consumer-grade companies like Bushmaster, RRA, or DPMS. This is pretty much common knowledge among people who shoot these rifles a lot.
As to Huldra, they have proprietary, Huldra-specific modifications to the Adam's Arms concept that represent substantial improvement over AA's aftermarket conversions.