The lower is polymer, and the grip is part of the lower, so the answer is no.
ARmalite Model 15 but it very commonly thought to be automatic rifle.
The US Army presently uses the M4 carbine, a shorter and much modified version of the Armalite AR15.
Eugene Stone, from the ArmaLite corporation. After that, Colt "bought" the project.
ArmaLite was a division of Fairchild, and made SEVERAL rifles that used the AR (ArmaLite Rifle) prefix. See the link below to a history of the company. Eugene Stoner was the primary designed of the AR15 series of firearms.
Armalite was a division of Fairchild Aircraft. The AR15 was designed by Eugene Stoner. The story that the firearm was named after a Filipino inventor called Armando Lite is just a myth.
It is the Carbine (short rifle) version of the AR15. AR stands for Armalite Rifle. It is a semi auto rifle.
This is not a car and its definition is not related to cars either. CAR-15 (Colt Assault Rifle-15) is a familiy of M-16 and AR-15 rifles. Part of this family is the ArmaLite 15, better known as AR-15.
Similar. They are both "AR style" rifles. AR-15 is a copyrighted brand name- other companies can make rifles in that style, but cannot legally call them AR-15s. The R-15 is the Remington version. The AR-15 was developed by the ArmaLite Company- and AR actually stands for "ArmaLite Rifle".
This is not a car and its definition is not related to cars either. CAR-15 (Colt Assault Rifle-15) is a familiy of M-16 and AR-15 rifles. Part of this family is the ArmaLite 15, better known as AR-15.
Rifle made by Armalite Well yes and no, also Colt, Bushmaster etc.... its like saying coke instead of soda or Kleanex instead of tissue. It describes the style of the firearm, if you say my AR and you point to a Bushmaster everyone knows what you mean.
The nature of this question makes it difficult to determine what you are asking, so I'm going to throw a few answers at you to hopefully answer it. AR in the firearms world is the initialism of ArmaLite, the company that employed the inventor of the AR-15 design, Eugene Stoner. Technically one could call any firearm built by the Armalite company an AR. However, the AR-15 and its derivatives are extremely common firearms and the design has been copied by many companies. Rifles built in the pattern of the AR-15 (and the earlier AR-10) are often referred to as "AR's" as a catchall term for that design family.
Try AR15.com Try AR15.com