We work so hard to give you our honest and biased personal opinions and then you totally ignore our advice


Knowing me, by the time I've saved enough to buy anything, I'll have changed my mind about 20 timesO.S.O.K. wrote:The thing is, why ask if you've made up your mind? I mean, why not just state "I've decided to get a mini-14" or whatever.
We work so hard to give you our honest and biased personal opinions and then you totally ignore our advice![]()
Good to see I'm not alone in that...Jason_W wrote:Knowing me, by the time I've saved enough to buy anything, I'll have changed my mind about 20 times
Same here.alnitak wrote: No, never heard from those guys again -- on the axis or the buffalo. After almost two years. I've written them off
...didn't you mean the Ruger does NOT 'eat where it craps'...?txpete wrote:nothing against AR's I tot'ed a M16 for over 20 years.the fact is the ruger does eat where it craps (M16 gas system sucks).
Good point. I guess I like the 'carbine' and 'rifle' pairing, like with a .44 Mag 1894 and a .444 Marlin 336. In the semiauto guns, I'd make my 'carbine' a Mini-14, and my 'rifle' a Garand or M1A. If they had to share ammunition, I'd make the 'rifle' my DPMS bull-barrel. I know the CAR-15 'shortys' are considered a 'carbine', but they sure don't heft as handy as a Mini-14.2ndovc wrote:I don't think I would choose it over my Colt
AR Light Weight but I certianly would over a Heavy Barrel Mach.
If I'm going to lug around a rifle that heavy I'm going to
have my M1A!
I was basing my pricing off of old data. I didn't realize the cost of the minis had gone up so much in a few years. Weren't they retailing for Less than $600 new just a few years ago? Or maybe it was longer ago than that.madman4570 wrote:Pete,
Fair enough, Let's let it go at that. His money/His choice.
I was going buy the question of him asking "Compared to the AR-15, what's the general consensus? I like the fact that I can buy two minis for about the cost of one AR"
Maybe,they do sell 2 of those Ruger's for $900 (no idea) $450 for one??????????? New
The Match Colt will actually cost $900 New
Just was giving an honest opinion. But everyone has their likes and that's surely ok.
See ya!
Jason_W wrote:I was basing my pricing off of old data. I didn't realize the cost of the minis had gone up so much in a few years. Weren't they retailing for Less than $600 new just a few years ago? Or maybe it was longer ago than that.madman4570 wrote:Pete,
Fair enough, Let's let it go at that. His money/His choice.
I was going buy the question of him asking "Compared to the AR-15, what's the general consensus? I like the fact that I can buy two minis for about the cost of one AR"
Maybe,they do sell 2 of those Ruger's for $900 (no idea) $450 for one??????????? New
The Match Colt will actually cost $900 New
Just was giving an honest opinion. But everyone has their likes and that's surely ok.
See ya!
I wish!!txpete wrote:just going to throw one more thing for you jason to think on...
7.62 in a small package.
pete
socom
I will tell you no problems with your pie plates @150 yards with iron sights.
Jason_W wrote:I wish!!txpete wrote:just going to throw one more thing for you jason to think on...
7.62 in a small package.
pete
socom
I will tell you no problems with your pie plates @150 yards with iron sights.![]()
If I'm ever of means, that will be high on my list.
AJMD429 wrote:After all this emotional and ballistic 'debate', it really sounds like the thing to do is to buy a Mini-14 and an AR lower. That way, you've got your 'toe in the door', and can spend some time fiddling with the Mini to see if you like it (many of us can't imagine you wouldn't).
After that, if you like the Mini, keep it and slowly but surely accumulate the AR parts for a really cool HBAR match gun at your leisure. If you don't like the Mini, sell it and accelerate your progress towards your very own 'custom' AR-15 variant.
I've been interested in firearms for the past 40 years, and instead of spending money on flat-screen televisions, fancy cars (I replace mine every 20 years or so), or whatever, I wound up among other things with an AR-15 AND a Mini-14. I wouldn't like to just have one of them, any more than I'd like to choose between my Marlin 1894 in .44 Mag, and my 1903 Springfield in .30-06 - eventually, you'll want BOTH a Mini-14, and an AR-15.
FWiedner wrote:I have an AR and a Mini-14.
If I had to grab one and my day-pack on the way out the door in a hurry, it would be the Mini.
Cool!!txpete wrote:just going to throw one more thing for you jason to think on...
7.62 in a small package.
pete
socom
I will tell you no problems with your pie plates @150 yards with iron sights.
It's just like the old-school levergunners who think walnut & blued metal guns are "neat" but synthetic & stainless ones are "evil" -Meeteetse wrote: The black AR types, used by the military, are evil, while my mini's are "neat". I can't explain it.
Meeteetse wrote: The black AR types, used by the military, are evil, while my mini's are "neat". I can't explain it.
Yep, that's another way to put it.MrMurphy wrote:I like the Mini "in theory".
I love the Garand, so the idea is fine.
The reality in my experience (shooting Minis ranging from 1980s-mid 2000s vintage) has been different. Expensive mags, nonexistent accessories, and accuracy ranging from "shotgun" to "decent" depending on the rifle. Scoping didn't help.
As to comfort in the hand, I've spent most of my life with an AR/M16/M4 in my hand, so they feel "more natural" to me, that's a moot point. A Garand or a Lee-Enfield is just as comfortable.
If their QC and accuracy level was better and magazines didn't cost a fortune, I'd have one around. But they aren't/don't/won't so i keep my ARs and milsurps.
You bring up a good point there Nemhed (although I personally like beating dead horses, don't tell my mother). They are selling Minis to someone. Lot's of em. One thing that I think us folks that frequent shooting and hunting forums such as this forget is that "most other shooters, hunters and gun enthusiast don't frequent forums or other related internet sites". There's lot's of guys out there shooting guns that the internet deems as worthless and those guys are having fun and killin game with em. Most shooters buy a gun, shoot a gun and maybe clean a gun and are for the most part happy with them. I see it all the time with the 10/22. You'll see comments like you have to dump $$ into them to make them shoot. Well don't tell that to the millions of shooters out there plunkin away, killin squirrels and having fun with bone stock 10/22's (like I did for 25 years). The Mini is the same. I'm betting that 9 outta 10 Mini's sold will never see a bench beyond sight-in time if even then. And 9 outta 10 will never see an aftermarket part. But there's lots out there blasting away with stock Mini's regardless of that and and having fun. The Mini is what it is. Ruger never claimed otherwise. If you like em have fun. If you don't like em why not let someone else enjoy there's for what it is. I never understood all the AR vs. Mini stuff anyway, 2 different animals intended for 2 different groups as far as I can see. As I stated before the Mini is a "lever gun on steroids" and it's dang good at that.nemhed wrote:My final thoughts on this dead horse we keep beating: I've always had a "jones" for a Mini (spurred by A-TEAM episodes), I've always heard the reports on poor accuracy and other issues, and yet Ruger's been making them for over 30 years so they must be selling them to somebody. Ruger doesn't seem to be shy about jettisoning models from the line up that don't sell (ie; 44 mag carbines, leveractions). So I continue to wonder, "should I get a Mini 14 someday"?
Meeteetse wrote:Sometimes it seems to me that the people who are constantly finding fault with the Mini are just looking for an excuse not to buy one when they know they really want one.