F1 Firearmsdoesn’t really do basic ARs. Except when they do. Except not really.The F1 FDR-15is about the most “Plane Jane” AR-15 in F1’s lineup. When it comes to the most important parts of the gun, it’s anything but.

I often hear people say that “AR-15s are all pretty much the same.” Perhaps these people have fantastic amounts of money, or just don’t care what their dollars buy. I prefer that each of my pennies gets me as much value as it can. For my money, the differences matter.

There are a few places where the differences matter a lot in an AR-15 rifle. Those places are the bolt carrier group (BCG), the barrel, and the trigger.

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F1 puts some work into their BCGs. They’re well machined, super slick, and pretty pretty. I know it sounds goofy, but pretty actually matters on the BCG. A slick BCG, without tool marks and without rough edges, makes for less friction and longer life. The carrier itself is 8620 AQ steel and the bolt is the tried-and-true 158 Carpenter steel.

Beyond the materials, it’s also machined and put together well. The gas key screws are hella staked, and every part in the BCG is slick and polished. F1 spent time here, and here’s where it matters.

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F1 gives the shooter several options on the coatings. This one is coated with their Mystic Silver Chromium Nitride coating. This coating is super durable and super slick. These are excellent materials and a legit high performance coating which will help the gunrun longer and with fewer malfunctions.

Durability for an AR-15 rifle should be measured in tens of thousands of rounds. That said, hundreds can give a shooter a good idea of what’s going to happen down the road. Run it hard, look for excess carbon build up and see if anything goes wrong.

I appreciate the range therapy provided by this review, because I needed it. The good news is that both you and I, dear reader, were the beneficiary. TTAG’s editor Dan handed me a box of 500 rounds of M193, and some interesting “Pack and Load” range ammo fromFort Scott Munitions(review pending).

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I took it all out the next afternoon and shot it. I shot it all. Sure, I did Mozambique drills, I ran to cover and fired from multiple positions. I spent some time doing target transitions as well as some slow unsupported aimed fire. But mostly I just did one mag dump after the next.

I used30-round PMAGs, 30-round GI metal mags, and a couple60-round Surefiremagazines. I sprayed some CLP in the gunbefore shooting and that’s it. I just let it rip. I had zero malfunctions of any kind. I shot it all, about 700 rounds, in one stupid-humid and hot afternoon.

The gunran perfectly. For an afternoon I forgot whatever the heck is going on in the rest of the world. It made me happy. This gunis not particularly expensive, but whatever the cost, that afternoon was worth it. Plus, a quick dip in the ultrasonic cleaner and the BCG comes out looking like new.