Message from @Artemis
Discord ID: 710572353708490825
But yeah I'd definitely suggest looking at Carl Murawski's youtube channel. They've been in construction for a long time and know a good bit about clothes that last, and practical fashion
But still worth the $350
I work in IT at a grain mill, so I'm in a lot of different environments from an office to mills full of giant industrial machinery, so I found a happy balance with the redwing heritage blacksmith boot. It's not a workboot, but still durable enough to take life. At least so far, haven't had them too long.
Nice, I switched a while ago, on my third pair of the loggers... 3 years on each, and honestly the last time I just got a new pair because it had been 3 years
But I work in a chemical manufacturing facility, so I have to have steel toe, slip resistant, and electrical rated
I've had mine for about 3 weeks now and they're just starting to break in, walking around 8 miles a day. Still not the most comfortable thing but I've been told that because of the cork midsole and stiff leather, they'd be horrible at first and end up super comfortable
Yeah, all redwings are like that
Most good boots with natural materials from what I hear
I've heard it said that a bad shoe will be comfortable to start and uncomfortable after time, while a good shoe is uncomfortable to start but gets more comfortable over time. Then you've got custom stuff which is just always comfortable
but I'm not paying a thousand dollars for a pair of boots at my salary lol
The Merrill 8" I got are comfortable all the way, had them a while now
I wear 5.11 boots. I like them, and they last a while. I have two pairs
5.11 makes decent stuff. I tried their pants and wore them out in two months though
a couple different ones. Right now I'm on a pair of duluth pants and they're holding up decently
I've never heard anything good about 5.11
I wear Blaklader x1600 pants for work, the only thing I can't destroy easily... blew out the Duluth fire hose pants in less than a year
I like the built in kneepad pockets on the x1600's though, I rock some heavy duty waffle style hard rubber with air in each square.
I blew out the firehose pants pretty quickly, but I wanted to try their jeans. So far they seem to be pretty good quality, and a bit better built than the firehose pants
I wanna say the firehose pants lasted me 4 months, which is longer than usual
Nice. Welcome to the land of the slightly less oppressed 😛
ha
yeah well ive got to get there first
heres hoping all my meme-ry hasnt put me on too many watch lists
Nah, watch lists are a way of life here.... Obama isn't president anymore
And unlike literally every other country in the world, we let everyone in for the most part.
citizenship as long as you can afford the legal fees and wait times from what I hear
This may be a dumb question but would either of these be a problem running it without a suppressor
either of what?
Maybe the buffer. Your best bet is to get an adjustable gas block
running most suppressors will push more gas back into the receiver. The charging handle is made to direct it away from your face so it doesn't go straight up your nose, which is uncomfortable. The buffer is probably just heavier to take the increased backpressure
I'd probably suggest just going with a regular buffer, adjustable gas block, and suppressor optimized charging handle. Tune the gas block to work without the suppressor, so it'll cycle with or without it
Fair enough, I'd probably just be better off building it then. It's just a 3rd option bc I found a SOLGW m4 76 for a good price, and 2 BCM that I'm looking at
IMO building to spec is always better... most of those companies offer parts and some are better than others at different things.
I feel like I don't know enough about AR's to build one correctly yet
And I'm not looking for anything crazy just a solid rifle for close to mid range
That's why you build one, you learn everything you need to know
They are basic as fuck