If you are familiar with the AR-15 platform of rifles, you are familiar with the Forward Assist assembly. It's a little button on the right side o the upper that acts as a lever to push the bolt carrier forward in case of a failure to fully seat the bolt.
When I was a young grunt in basic training, I was taught the Slap, Tap, Bang method of immediate action. Slap the bottom of the magazine to ensure that it is fully seated, Tap the forward assist to ensure that the bolt is fully seated, and squeeze the trigger to make the rile go Bang. Nowadays, the Army teaches the SPORTS acronym. Slap the magazine, Pull the charging handle, Observe that the chamber is clear, Release the charging handle, Tap the forward assist, and Squeeze the trigger. Hopefully, the rifle will go bang.
Each of the M16s I was issued, and all of the AR's I subsequently bought, had a Forward Assist. It was part of the upper assembly, but I never much thought about it. It was simply there. Until I picked up my latest AR, bought used at a pawn shop because I realized that point I didn't have one in the house.
I've never had much of a love affair with the AR series, considering them simply as a tool. Useful, indeed, but extraneous to the rifles I really liked. However, no good tool box is complete without a wrench of some sort, and no good gun cabinet is complete without an AR, so I made my way to the local pawn shop and picked one up. It was several months later that a friend was inspecting it and commented that it didn't have a forward assist. I had mounted an optic, sighted it in, and put a couple of hundred rounds through it, and frankly had never noticed the lack of that little button on the right side of the upper.
So, I started questioning if the little button was necessary. The rifle fires flawlessly is absolutely accurate, is very light weight, It's nimble, a classic carbine in a very familiar package. Yet, it doesn't have a forward assist.
And, I realized that in 25 years carrying one for my Uncle, I never really used the Forward Assist. If the rifle failed to go into battery, I'd conduct immediate action, but the idea of jamming a cartridge into a chamber that didn't want to accept it wasn't something I was likely to do.
I understand why it was included in military contract rifles, especially in the early years before the platform was dead-nuts reliable. I am certainly not going to run out and buy a new upper simply because I don't have a Forward Assist.
So, has the familiar little button become extraneous on the AR platform? What say ye?