$100k Titanium AR .308 Battle Rifle

Well maybe not a battle rifle.. more like an “Impress People with all your disposable income” rifle:

You can check out more pics and info over at NEMO Arms.  Damn I love the look of Titanium.

The barrel and a few other components are still stainless steel.  Titanium is almost twice as heavy as Aluminum and way more difficult to machine. Like he said in the video, it’s to showcase their machining capabilities (and to no doubt get a buzz going around the internet).

NEMO arms will be at the NRA annual meeting today, so if you’re going you can check it out.

Thoughts?

Hat tip: Jerry


Comments

32 responses to “$100k Titanium AR .308 Battle Rifle”

  1. agentorange197 Avatar
    agentorange197

    That will go great with my Gold AK!

  2. El Duderino Avatar
    El Duderino

    $100k? Seriously, these guys can just suck it. A rifle that reads your mind and instantly kills people out to 2000m wouldn’t be 100 grand.

  3. Timmeehh Avatar

    I guess you’ve never heard of Holland&Holland shotguns.

  4. D’fa? For $100K it had better come with 100,000 rounds of ammo, a couple of spare barrels and bolt groups, and your own personal SI swimsuit model to clean the damn thing. They could have just as easily showcased their machining by building a standard AR and putting it through some serious durability and QC testing.

  5. Machining Ti is costly but it’s not $98k expensive for christ’s sake.

    1. M-cameorn Avatar
      M-cameorn

      but have you factored in the cost of materials……..since right now, Titanium costs roughly 20x more than aluminum does……

      then you need to find machines and tools that can actually handle cutting the Ti…

      ….and you have to find people who actually have experience working with Ti to cut the parts……

      then you need take into account that working with Ti takes longer than working with Al…….and with the going rate of shop time what it is….thats not going to be cheap.

      adds up quick.

      1. El Duderino Avatar
        El Duderino

        If they secured a government contract they might be able to do the $100k…

      2. I have a lot of experience with titanium. It does cost a more as a raw material, but the tooling to cut titanium is not extreme in any respect. Titanium can be machined using the same WC bits that are used on any hardened steel parts, like gun barrels. The issue with cutting titanium is that hot titanium has a tendency to dissolve other metal parts that it comes in contact with. That is why it takes longer to machine, you can’t let the parts heat up.

        But onto the real issue here. The genus of Eugene Stoner what designing a rifle in which the receiver handled no ballistic load. That’s why the upper is made of aluminum. Going to titanium is stupid. It has nearly twice the density (4.6 g/cm3 vs 2.7 g/cm3 for AL) so a Ti receiver is heavier. The receiver will be stronger, but the extra strength is un necessary. It’s a little more corrosion resistant, which would only matter in a war on Venus where it rains HCl. Anodized aluminum will handle any environment that a human could survive in.

        In the end, this is a gimmic. It’s a $10,000 “more money than brains” gun that they marked up to the price of a Porche because… maybe they can, I guess. But let’s be honest. Ti guns are not new, I have a few S&W Airlights. Taurus has a Ti frame and cylinder gun. The S&W 360PD is spendy but not 50 times the price of a model 60. Knock a zero off the end of the price tag and maybe they will sell a few, but at this price, the floor model is gonna be the only model.

        1. NikonMikon Avatar
          NikonMikon

          Not to mention the expansion characteristics of Ti are different than Al, I would assume… Could this lead to problems with the gas block sealing on the stainless barrel? bi-metal situations always lead to things like sheared gaskets under rapid heat-up.

          1. El Duderino Avatar
            El Duderino

            So if it carries no load, let’s make one out of 14k gold! That would sell for $100k for sure.

  6. gotta getz wun a deez fo ma niggahs

    1. My bad, been reading too much thug life.
      What i meant to say was:
      Why, how jolly interesting, i shall have to add this to the list of overpriced things i wish i could afford but probably wouldn’t buy even if i could.

  7. That’s actually pretty neat, and at least they’re honest about the fact that it’s wildly impractical and just a demo piece for them to pimp around.

    1. A couple of other companies I can think of would go “Neva been dun befo’” and claim you weren’t a true gun enthusiast unless you owned at least two :p

  8. spencer Avatar

    Congratulations you made an even heavier .308 than an AR-10. You should have replaced a steel receiver (Think M-14) with Ti.

  9. NEMO Arms just underwent restructuring, and I would agree with your comment about them creating buzz. You might better know them from a company they recently purchased, Montana based SI Defense. Look forward to their more moderately priced offerings…

  10. All that Ti, but steel firing pin?

  11. Dontshootmebro Avatar
    Dontshootmebro

    You cant polish a turd, Beavis.

  12. I’m not gonna bash this, or the guy. It’s absolutely a statement piece. I’m glad he admits it to be impractical… Pretty cool when you’re all said and done.

  13. Cheaper than an H&K 416, and at least the customer service at Nemo isn’t required to spit in your mouth before they’ll help you.

  14. When the answer to the question, “Can we do it?,” is yes, it sometimes needs to be followed by, “But, does it make any sense to?”

  15. I vaguely remember the military having problems with a titanium m240, leads me to believe something about it is unsuitable for firearms

  16. ThatGuy Avatar

    Nice piece. He says in the video it’s not meant to sell any of them, it’s just to show off what they can do. I’m sure they could produce these for under 5K if they thought there was actually a market for them.

  17. $100K must include the cost of at least some of the machines themselves….

    Cool toy, though.

  18. $100k can get a few good transferrable machine guns where legal. Though I’m sure there’d be some drug cartel bosses who wouldn’t mind the bling…

  19. All – thanks for all the comments on the NEMO Ti ONE. It’s a conversational piece and it’s garnered a lot of attention for sure. Keep in mind, our team at NEMO are “gun guys and gals” who love designing and building weapons. Moreover, most of us come from extensive backgrounds of working professionals.

    Ti ONE started as a conversation over some beers “What if?” and “how would people react?” it was fun to do (and challenging) and never meant for sale. But with so many people asking, we had to put a price on it. $100k is crazy…but the raw material along cost nearly $30k AND it is Serial No 1 after all.

    At the end of the day we have had a lot of fun and more importantly gotten a lot of hate and attention from lefty liberal newspapers over this weapon – further pissing off people who want to take your guns away. And at the end of the day…it’s worth the money to us just based on that.

    1. NikonMikon Avatar
      NikonMikon

      More power to ya man.

    2. 30K for the raw material my a$$! $3000.00….maybe! Great looking gun and no doubt cool, but be honest.

  20. I would actually be more interested in seeing the machine tooling that made the rifle. That would be more impressive.

    1. NikonMikon Avatar
      NikonMikon

      Wouldn’t it be similar to any standard tooling used in the creation of a billet AR-15 except for the bits?

  21. Oh, and a “FULL” titanium ar? why would the barrel not be>????

  22. Konstantin G. Mantzouranis Avatar
    Konstantin G. Mantzouranis

    I’ll buy it for $30,000… Seriously… Bank Check sent via Fedex!