

Of situations, and the simple they are the more reliable they are. Century Arms - AK Rifles - Canik Pistols - Surplus Firearms - Surplus Accessories. It is put together, still like I say before, I have seen a lot of guns on a lot Relays on the parts they use on the USA to put one together and how Well its not the gun itself that is the problem, the problem Kind of heavy and by the way I see a lot of ppl dont like the cetme , Real macoy get it, use it on Guatemala like the G3 they are good, they just Remember the simple it is, the better it is, and if you can get a Fal, I mean the Poor like me goes for ar180, saiga, ak47, ak74 or any vepr does the job really good 308 Winchester (7.62x51mm NATO) System of Operation: Gas Overall Length: 41' Length of Barrel: 20.8' Rifling: 6 groove RH. Newer models accept either magazine though the inch patterned might wobble slightly. The rifle is made up of an inch pattern parts kit fitted to a metric upper receiver. SPECIFICATIONS: Stock: Black Synthetic Caliber. This gun is assembled from both inch and metric L1A1 (FN FAL) parts. Well, what can I say, if you have the mula for a robard 96 go for it, but a 308 Sporter by Century Arms Century Arms' FAL rifle is a semi-automatic, or self-loading, gas-operated, magazine-fed repeating rifle. The stoner 63 was design on the idea more for special ops than to regular troops. The stoner 63 on squad auto weapon uses open bolt, something the robartĭont do ( close bolt all the time ), well stoner design the ar18 and the 63īack in the day, like he design the ar10 in 308 and later was changed toĥ.56 and manufactor as the ar15 or m16 to the military, just remember The robard 96 is just a suped up ar18, it is not the Stoner 63, it just resembles it, They were assembled in Canada at CAI’s sister company, CIA utilizing Brazilian (IMBEL) and Argentine (DGFM-FMAP) receivers and mostly British parts. Century Arms imported many of the FAL/L1A1 type rifle from 1989 to 1994. Let me know what you get, an FAL is next on my list of purchases. ATF changed their interpretation in 1994 and disallowed the thumbhole stock as a means of neutering an otherwise normal rifle. Of course the best FAL I guess is the SA58 which is 100% new and carries a lifetime warranty and commands a high price. Or, if you want better quality, get an STG58A ($900), which is an Austrian parts kit and a quality, new DSA made receiver. If you want an FAL (as I do), look at getting one made from a quality receiver like an Imbel parts kit with an Imbel receiver ($600). Centerfire sells an FAL sporter made by Century and I know it has both metric and inch parts which really doesn't sit well with me. Century makes cheap stuff and in their case, you get what you pay for. I recently vowed never to buy another Century gun again, I would suggest you do the same. The couple that I've assembled for customers I just cut the spring to the right length for the properly set up grip.Siagalova: I've got a CETME that has a Century receiver (as will your L1A1) and it shot fine for a long time, got all the accessories for it, wide handguard, claw mount, etc.but now the receiver is loose, the mags no longer fit tight and therefore it no longer feeds reliably. You do need to cut the trigger return spring to the right length - CAI didn't want to solve the problem of making a hole with a little metal shelf in the grip for that spring, so they threw them out and used cut up extractor springs so that the longer spring could just bear on the grip stud. The tab on the trigger plate is no big deal, you don't need it. The bolt assembly can then be pulled straight back and out of the receiver. Remove the receiver cover by sliding it to the rear. When the user pulls it back the rifle breaks open. In the above picture shown just under the windage adjustment is the takedown lever. The easy fix for the grip stud is to use a stepped bushing from the hardware store, 1/4" ID, probably 3/8" OD (check that). This Century model featured in these pictures is the metric with an M-249 buttstock. Inch lower is easy to go back to what you want. Probably easier to replace the metric lower if needed, I think I paid $30 or so for the one I have. I don't think you can repair a metric lower with the grip stud gone, but you could modify an inch grip to work on the lower. It was adopted by nearly 60 countries under various model designations L1A1 (Great Britain), R1A1 (South Africa), STG 58 (Germany), FAL (Turkey), etc. The FAL was the main battle rifle of most NATO forces during the Cold War years. The inch lower will basically have nothing but the trigger sticking out, the metric lower has a couple tabs welded to it that hold the trigger return plunger and spring. G1 Semi-Auto Sporter Rifle w/ SAW Furniture. You'll need to pull the stock off to tell whether the lower was inch or metric. I don't own one, but I've made a lot of grips for both
