I like you
So here's a bit of a tangent:
I urge you to weigh your options. (not literally by weight)
Humping a weapon is something people tend to focus on and as a result they try for the lightest set-up. Blah-blah-blah.
As I stated before, yes you will notice the difference in felt weight, that's a pro if you don't want to hump a rifle.
The con, known to guys who actually train outside of a bench and have long forgotten what a 100yrd line looks like,
is that light weight guns are extremely fatiguing to the shooter. The constant need to drive the gun is a PITA.
This, especially while on the move engaging multiple targets.
So fatigue while humping a rifle or fatigue while shooting a rifle. Pick your poison.
For me, I prefer a heavier gun, or a moderately weighty gun. I use guns to shoot, that's its job
and it's most valuable to me doing its job.
Offsetting the shooting fatigue of a lightweight rifle is pretty simple, for me a comp, a BattleComp.
A comp is a must have on a lightweight rifle. Something you may want to consider, consider it financially too.
Most people prefer flash suppression over a comp, consider that too.
Another downside to a lightweight barrel is the heat. I've noticed they get hot pretty fast during sustained fire.
Heat is
THE #1 factor in barrel life expectancy. Same for degraded accuracy. The hotter it gets, the worse
off your barrel is. Suppressing a lightweight- Sucks balls. POA-POI shift can off/on is heavy on a lightweight.
The additional weight of the can on a thin profile barrel causes flex and that translates to to shift.
Hope this helps.
I's stick with a Gov. Profile. That's just me though. [url=http://www.freesmileys.or