Site icon Jane Jane Jane

Two Rangers Wanted To Combine the Best Of The AK-47 & AR-15. Here is the AK-21

It will be interesting to see how this new rifle scores in field trials. Especially with the aluminum construction … it sounds good but you also want reliability. Not sure you will get that with aluminum. If they would like to gift me with one of the first runs of the AK-21, I will be happy as all git out to submerge it in the mud, test fire it, and then clean it and add it to the guns that I lost in that tragic boating accident.

Source: Military.com

Two Former Rangers Wanted to Combine the Best Parts of the AK-47 and AR-15. This is What They Created

Two Rangers finally may have settled the debate between fans of the AK-47 and adherents of the AR-15.

Joe Stenzel and Jared Potter, veterans of the 2nd Ranger Battalion, met while serving in the Army. During their deployments to Afghanistan, they noticed the shortcomings of each platform.

After leaving the military, they decided that addressing those shortcomings might be the best post-military career for both of them, and it may help create manufacturing jobs in the United States.

The result is an upgraded version of the AK-47 rifle, the AK-21. It’s the first aluminum platform AK to hit the market, and it’s as reliable in the field as the AK — but has the user-friendly features and manufacturability of the AR-15 family.

The AK rifle isn’t as ergonomically friendly as the AR family, and it’s not as easily modified, Potter said. During their deployments in Afghanistan, he and Stenzel saw a huge need for a weapon that had those ergonomic and modular features while using AK magazines.

Stenzel Industries’ AK-21 can do that, Potter said.

Maintaining the reliability of the AK model required retooling the methods of building one. Potter said producing an AK model is very labor intensive, estimating it takes around 40 hours to produce a single weapon. But that process guarantees the famous reliability of the weapon.

Joe Stenzel, co-founder of Stenzel Industries and the creator of the AK-21, designed the rifle’s parts so that they were easier and cheaper to manufacture. Parts for the AK-21 don’t require a firearm-specific machine shop, which means they can manufacture the parts anywhere in the country.

The AK-21 includes features conceived and incorporated by the two Army Rangers in combat:

Potter knows from experience that the AR and AK platform are great weapons systems, but having a reliable, ergonomic weapon that can fire the 7.62 round is something that the military and other federal agencies will have a need for today and into the future.

Stenzel Industries’ AK-21 is made in Elk River, Minnesota, and will be available on the civilian market. The retail cost for one of these rifles will be $3,999 but it is available for preorder now.

Two Rangers Wanted To Combine the Best Of The AK-47 & AR-15. Here is the AK-21

TD

Exit mobile version