parabelum wrote:Honestly, if this is your first AR I would highly recommend getting a factory built AR, 5.56 chambered with 1:7 twist and first get familiar with the basic in/outs, construction etc.
I respectfully disagree, I think that building one is the best way to learn the ins and outs of the rifle. With a vise, upper and lower vice blocks, an armorers wrench, and a razor blade you can put together a very nice rifle. As far as getting everything to shoot straight, to me that completely is subjective to the barrel of your choice. You could buy a $400 match grade shihlen and have problems like headspacing, but you will find that the cheaper barrels will definitely have flaws far more often than the expensive ones. How the user installs the barrel can affect accuracy but typically if correctly installed (not hard at all) a more expensive well known match grade barrel is what it is. My point being accuracy is about the barrel and free floating rather than specific torques or installing one way or another. As long as your barrel is tight, your gas system is true and all holes properly lined up, there is not very much more that the end user can do to make it any more safer than a store bought gun. The headspace obviously "should" be checked but once again a quality barrel should eliminate that. But then again I love building things and take pride in saying that I put my rifle(s) together myself.