Their is a couple iterations of American Spirit Arms.
The first is the worst, and where all the horror stories come from. The owner “Bob”, wasn’t a gun guy. He was a real estate guy. He owned the shopping center in N. Phx where the gun store was located. He basically took over from a previous tenant who rented a storefront from Bob.
At first (like 2 months), Bob ran the store with his step daughter and an actual armorer. They turned out decent stuff, even though Bob wasn’t always the friendliest guy to deal with. Eventually, Bobs attitude drove off the armorer and he started just hiring anyone off the street to put together his stuff.
This is when the big problems started. QC went out the window. Lots of barrels that didn’t have gas ports drilled, barrels that weren’t properly rifled, and lots of other problems. Bob just started buying any rejected junk from manufacturers and slapped the parts together and shipped them out. It was a gamble if you got anything that worked or not.
Eventually Bob moved the shop to Scottsdale near where Scottsdale Gun Club is today. He had a revolving door of people he hired to assemble his guns. His people skills were so bad, most didn’t last a month. The reputation for ASA was that the lower receiver was usually good. The upper receiver could be good but sometimes had issues. The barrels and lower parts were almost always junk. Bob developed a habit of yelling at customers who brought their stuff back for issues. He was known to throw the guns back at them, unrepaired, when they came to pick them up and tell them to never come back.
After a couple years in Scottsdale, Bob got really sick. He sold the business to others who tried to salvage it. They tried to innovate, with side charging uppers, and improve QC. Sadly the damage to the brand had been done. Nobody was wanting anything with American Spirit Arms name on it. After struggling for a while, the new owners closed the store for good.