AR-7
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AR-7 | |
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Armalite AR-7 survival rifle, and 8, 10 and 15-round magazines. |
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Type | survival rifle |
Place of origin | |
Service history | |
In service | 1959–Present |
Production history | |
Designer | Eugene Stoner |
Designed | 1958 |
Variants | US Henry Survival Rifle; Israeli Pilot's Survival Rifle; Explorer II Pistol |
Specifications | |
Weight | 1.13 kg |
Length | 889 mm |
Barrel length | 406 mm |
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Cartridge | .22 Long Rifle |
Action | recoil-operated |
Rate of fire | Semi-automatic |
Muzzle velocity | 350 m/s (~1,125 ft/s) |
Effective range | 100 m |
Feed system | Standard 8-round magazine. 10, 15, 25, 50 round magazines available. |
Sights | Aperture |
The ArmaLite AR-7, designed by Eugene Stoner, is the civilian-commercial version of a rifle adopted by the US Air Force as a pilot and aircrew survival weapon. It is considered a novelty, due to its unique features.
Contents |
[edit] History & Design
The AR-7 shares some of the features of the bolt-action AR-5, a rifle adopted by the U.S. Air Force in 1956, but is a different design[1]. Like the AR-5, the AR-7 was designed for shooting small game. The rifle can be disassembled to its component parts: barrel, receiver, magazine, and stock. All its parts are designed to be stored in the stock; the AR-5 was chambered for the .22 Hornet cartridge. Both weapons were constructed primarily of aluminum with plastic for the stock and buttcap. Even the barrel is aluminum, with a rifled steel liner. [2]
The AR-7 is chambered for the .22 Long Rifle cartridge, and measures 35 inches overall when assembled. It disassembles to three sections, with everything stowing inside the ABS stock, and measures 16 inches long when configured for storage. The rifle weighs in at a mere 2.5 lb so this is even light enough to take along backpacking. Drop it in a lake and it will float, as did the previous AR-5/MA-1 design. The rear sight is a peep sight, which comes on a flat metal blade with two different size openings to look through. It is adjustable for elevation (up-down). The front sight is adjustable for windage (side-side). Accuracy is sufficient for hunting small game at ranges to 50 yards.
[edit] Criticisms
The design was sold to Charter Arms in 1973. According to some accounts posted by enthusiasts, this is where quality began to suffer[3]. Barrels were said to be prone to warp. Standard aperture sights provided less than accurate shot placement. The most frequent problem, reported in various online discussions, was that the rifle frequently jammed[4].
Since Charter Arms sold the design and rights to Henry Repeating Arms Corporation in 1980, the AR-7 has regained its reputation for reliability, provided that high-velocity .22 Long Rifle cartidges are used to insure proper cycling of the action.
[edit] Production History
(Summary of information available in The Blue Book of Gun Values)
- 1959-1973: Armalite
- 1973-1990: Charter Arms
- 1990-1997: Survival Arms, Cocoa, FL
- 1997-Present: Henry Repeating Arms Co., Brooklyn, NY
- 1998-Present: AR-7 Industries, LLC, Meriden, CT
[edit] Operation
The rifle functions as a blowback semi-automatic. This means the force of the fired cartridge will push the bolt backwards against a spring, ejecting the fired cartridge and the spring then pushes the bolt forwards, loading another cartridge from the magazine for every pull of the trigger. This is a time tested simple and very reliable operating system for a firearm which is expected to see use in less than desirable conditions. On the other hand, the simplicity of the mechanism in the AR-7 has caused some consternation for range operators, since the bolt does not lock back at any point. This means there's no easy way to demonstrate the weapon is in a safe, unloaded state without manually holding the bolt back.
[edit] Variants
[edit] Explorer II Pistol
One variant of the AR-7 was the Explorer II pistol[5]. It was essentially the receiver of the rifle, an eight-inch removable barrel, and a pistol grip in place of a stock. It came with two eight-round magazines, though larger capacity magazines could be found (see table above). The Explorer II had the bulk and weight of a full-caliber handgun, with none of the advantages. It resembled a Broomhandle Mauser, down to the inadequate grip and a forward-heavy design.
[edit] Henry Survival Rifle
In 1980, the design and production rights passed on to Henry Repeating Arms and the compact rifle was slightly revised. The AR-7 is now known as the U.S. Henry Survival rifle. An ABS material replaced the plastic which was prone to cracking and failure. The sights were replaced with peep style sights for improved accuracy. Present versions also have a standard 3/8 in. rail milled into the top of the receiver for mounting a wide variety of optics. Rifles manufactured by Henry are the only ones with this last feature.
[edit] Israeli Pilot's Survival Rifle
Another variant was made by Armalite and sold to the Israeli Military for use as pilot/aircrew survival weapons [6]. The Israelis further modified these rifles, adding the telescoping stock, a pistol grip from from a FAL-type rifle, shortening the barrel (to 13.5 inches), and adding a front sight based on the K98k Mauser.
Following Israeli service, some of these rifle were re-imported into the United States by the Bricklee Trading Company (the barrels are marked with the BTC identification) for sale on the civilian market, and command a premium among collectors. In order to comply with US Federal law, a 3-inch muzzle brake had to be permanently attached in order to meet the minimum 16 inch barrel requirement.
[edit] After-market Modifications
The fact that both the barrel and stock are detachable has led to a plethora of after-market accessories, similar to those available for the Ruger 10/22. Barrels, stocks, and grips, of varying finishes and utility, can be added to the rifle. These include collapsible stocks, wire-framed stocks, pistol grips, flash suppressors, shrouded barrels, high-capacity magazines, telescopic sights, reflex 'red dot' sights and other occasionally fanciful-looking hardware, usually at a cost greater than the rifle. The accessories almost always make it impossible to use the original floating stock for storage.
A complaint sometimes heard about the AR-7 is its lack of a sling, apart from the highly modified Israeli models. This lack is easily remedied by the purchase of an Uncle Mike's Quick-Detachable Sling Swivel for a 20-gauge shotgun (part number Set No. 1597-2) and a 1-inch universal rifle sling available at most sporting goods shops and through catalogs. As the forward sling swivel uses a split barrel band that can be easily attached to and removed from the barrel, this arrangement allows the continued use of the factory stock for storage and carriage in a backpack because no permanent alteration to the rifle is required.
Many of the jamming problems associated with the AR-7 are commonly solved by owners who file down the sides of the firing pin to reduce friction, as well as filing a small loading ramp or chamfer into the chamber of the barrel.
[edit] AR-7 in Popular Culture
- The AR-7 appears in the James Bond movie, From Russia With Love. In the movie 007 uses it to shoot down an attacking helicopter by killing the pilot. In the beginning, Q describes the rifle as an "AR-7 folding sniper's rifle, point two-five caliber, with an infrared telescopic sight". There is no scope shown, nor is the rifle .25 caliber. However, the rifle does have a unique deep-red colored stock, not found on any production variants.
- Another Bond film, Goldfinger, also depicts an AR-7 being used as a sniper rifle.
- In the television series Get Smart, Agent Maxwell Smart used a customized AR-7 that was configured to resemble a Thompson submachine gun. The aftermarket parts kit to so configure the AR-7 is among the rarest of all aftermarket options and commands high prices when one can be found.
- A highly tricked-out AR-7 is briefly featured in the 2005 movie, The Interpreter, depicted as an assassin's weapon with a gray finish and after-market stock and barrel.
- In the television series Boston Legal, character Denny Crane (played by William Shatner) takes a camouflaged Henry-manufactured rifle out of a cupboard in his office, assembles it, and uses it to shoot an armed man threatening to kill his friend Alan Shore.
- The book Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors, published in 1983 under a pseudonym, recommends the use of the AR-7. Subsequently, the recommendation was taken to heart in a 1993 triple murder by James Perry while acting as a hitman.