Your AR-15 Can Run a Belt — No NFA Stamp, No Apologies
The FightLite MCR drops onto any AR lower and feeds M27 disintegrating links — same belt as the M249 SAW, totally legal, zero tax stamp.
The FightLite MCR is a belt-fed upper that drops onto your existing AR-15 lower — no NFA paperwork, no tax stamp, no Class III dealer, no permission slip from anyone.
Recoil's Iain Harrison just ran it hard. The verdict: it's exactly as cool as it sounds, and it works.
**Let that sink in.** The same M27 disintegrating link belt that feeds the military's M249 SAW — running on the semi-auto AR sitting in your safe right now.
The MCR accepts both standard box magazines and belt simultaneously, so you're not giving anything up. Swap the upper, load a belt, and you've got the most interesting rig at the range. Guaranteed.
Getting here wasn't fast. The concept dates to 1998. The road from prototype to production was long enough that most people wrote it off as vaporware. It wasn't. Civilian demand has been stress-testing these uppers hard ever since — and the market answered.
There are real engineering realities to know going in. The AR platform's short operating stroke creates feeding challenges that purpose-built machine guns don't face. FightLite engineered around those constraints — but Harrison flags two things: manage your barrel heat on long strings, and stay disciplined on maintenance. Not dealbreakers. Just the price of admission for running a belt on a platform that wasn't born to do it.
One geometry note: the 100-round drum bag sits a touch high when using the standard magwell adapter. Purpose-built AR lowers that delete the magwell solve that cleanly.
Practical for home defense? No. Practical for range days, collecting, and exercising every square inch of your Second Amendment rights in the most satisfying way possible? **Absolutely.**
The civilian market keeps engineering forward while anti-gun politicians keep scheming backward. The FightLite MCR is proof — a walking, shooting rebuttal to three decades of magazine-ban arguments, and it's completely legal to own in free states.
If you're in a state that hasn't surrendered to Bloomberg's playbook, this is worth a serious look. Check FightLite's site for current availability and pricing.
**Bottom line:** They keep telling you what you don't need. The MCR is your answer. Buy one while you still can — because if they could ban it, they already would have.
Comments
Share your take. Name is public; state is optional. Be civil — spam is removed.
Loading comments…