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Born from the ashes of WWII, the CETME design group was established in Spain, and staffed by many Mauser employees like Dr. Ludwig Vorgrimler, who brought their research and designs with them. They would later develop and adopt the CETME C, better known to American shooters and collectors under its German licensed designation: the G3 / HK91 in 7.62x51 / .308. Faced with the transition by militaries to the 5.56 in the 1970s, and with their pending entrance into NATO, Spain and CETME began in earnest to develop a 5.56 rifle for their military. The result was the last roller-locking rifle to be adopted by any military, and the first and only one specifically designed for the 5.56/.223 from the ground up, the CETME L.Unlike its German cousin the HK33, it was not a scaled down version of the 7.62 receiver. A totally new design, the CETME L is thinner and has a smaller form factor. The CETME L served with Spanish troops through the 80s and 90s, and was used during their service with Coalition Forces during Operation Desert Storm. The CETME L continues to serve to this day with Spanish Reserve and Police units.MarColMar uses original Spanish surplus parts, a new made-in-the-USA receiver, a cold-hammer-forged and nitrided barrel (1-in-7), brand new U.S. made furniture, all finished with Cerakote, to produce a beautiful new firearm that is now optimized for US STANAG M-16/AR-15 magazines. MarColMar didn't just copy the CETME L, they employed the newest materials and manufacturing processes (like robot welding) to produce a rifle even better than could be built in the 1980s.UPC631661616073Caliber.223 REM/5.56 NATOActionSEMI AUTOCapacity30 ROUNDSBarrel Length16.1" BARRELFinishGRAPHITE BLACKWeight8 LBS.
MPN#: RI0529

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Comments (10)

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I want one just to have one. If these ever drop closer to $1k Id Definitely pick one up.

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idk why their not offering it in GREEN ? if I'm not mistaken was that not the original color?? as far as weight and all that I see this more of a collectors gun then anything else, at least that's what I would do with it

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Probably to keep cost low but there are plenty of options out there for cheap furniture sets if you didn't want to paint:

https://wraithdefense.com/cetme-l-furniture-set/...

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My only reason for not owning a CETME rifle is the weight. These rifles are in my opinion ridiculously heavy for their size. Now of course many will say its "its because they're made well", which I do not disagree with. I just see know real feasible use for them unless your strictly bench shooting.As for home defense and any of the like, the AR is a better choice. Again this is my opinion, I certainly will respect yours, please return the favor.

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I DON'T LIKE WHAT YOU HAVE TO SAY! GET OUT! This is my website. this is my hobby/lifestyle, you don't know about it, you can't talk bout my firearms.... SHUT UP GET OUT, Stupid face. MY, comments section... You mean like that? Haha.

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Ownthenight, That sounds more like the woke cancel culture lol.

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More like cancer culture, ha

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Mine won't feed consistently and mangles brass

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then it's a real cetme! I have a model c by century that swears she's just a much sexier g3a6. I run a 6lb rdb, 8-9 lbs is fine in a 7.62 or a .260R. Not so great in a 5.56 unless it is full-auto or you're a bump-fire champion.

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hoovey, I’m not telling you what to do but if it were mine I would send it back for repair with a return label from them. Good Luck.

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