

Thankfully, QC10 chose not to follow in the misguided footsteps of so many other manufacturers with a standard mil-spec type charging handle. It responds immediately to a thumb press or the more likely palm slap. The bolt lock/release is slightly recessed into the upper receiver - just enough to get out of the way. After a few quick ups and downs, it moved easily with a solid start and stop. The safety is the familiar two-position toggle. The finger groove hits me in exactly the wrong place. The QC10 pistol grip is the same mil-spec grip you see on so many rifles. If you like the ergonomics of an AR rifle, you’ll like the QC10 as well.
#Ar 45 acp options plus#
Plus multiple barrel lengths, hand guard lengths, brace and stocks. Extended Metalform SMG 1911 magazines? Yup yet again. Want one for a GLOCK 9mm? They’ve got that.40S&W or. This particular model is a made for GLOCK 21 (.45ACP) magazines. Receiver, bolt, barrel, brace - everything is built from the ground up as a pistol, using pistol caliber parts, many manufactured in-house. Quarter Circle 10 prides themselves on being THE Pistol AR company. Part of the reason this gun carried so well and ran so well: it’s not an AR modified to fire a pistol caliber cartridge. It works perfectly there’s no reason to change it. There’s no guessing on the buffer weight or spring. This QC10’s SB Tactical Brace is bespoke and branded. Top it with a red dot optic - as almost everyone using the gun will - and your cheek-stock-weld isn’t nearly as important as it would be if your were looking through a magnified optic or iron sights. The brace stays in place no matter where you put it: arm, chest, shoulder or belly button (really, I have no idea what kids do these days).

Chambered in 45ACP, the QC10 GLF doesn’t generate enough recoil to matter.
