uspatriot1960
Custom
I don’t mind the short LOP. The whole package is very maneuverable for inside home defense. My pistol is in .300 BLK. I also have a 16” rifle in .223 Wylde available as well.
I suspect that number is low. I'm not even sure how an accurate tally could be found. Can't use background check info. Or at least you're not supposed to be able to.To me this was all a roundabout why to build a registry list. 4 million folks who shelled out money for said firearm were not about to just throw them away. Once that list was compiled they could then defend better why there needs to be a national registry list held by the government. Small steps to confiscation.
Some of the early AR pistols had barrels shorter than 12", my buddy had one that was only 5" barrel. It was a fire breathing dragon "novelty" piece of .
Edit:
Somewhere I had read 4 million was the number of AR pistols sold. Personally I think that is way high. Unless they are counting all that was ever sold from the beginning sans "brace".
The ATF may see that as "intent" to build an unregistered SBR. For example, if I own a registered M16 and want to keep a couple of M-16 disconnectors (full auto) for spares, but I also have a bunch AR15's then in ATF's way of thinking I'm intenting to convert one of those AR's into an unregistered machine gun just by having those spares under the same roof. Weird isn't it, but ATF will use stuff like this to jamb people up when they conduct a search and can't find anything else. So, if you take off the brace and the short barrel and build a rifle you need to check the regs to determine where you should store them, or whether you should even keep them.As far as that goes you can simply disassemble it. Those parts themselves aren't illegal.
Bingo Ritdogg2. I've wondered from the git-go when when various "assessories" started to hit the market how this stuff was going to plan out with ATF. I think the gov't has picked AR pistols to start with to test the waters for a larger registry down the road that will include AR rifles.To me this was all a roundabout why to build a registry list. 4 million folks who shelled out money for said firearm were not about to just throw them away. Once that list was compiled they could then defend better why there needs to be a national registry list held by the government. Small steps to confiscation.
Some of the early AR pistols had barrels shorter than 12", my buddy had one that was only 5" barrel. It was a fire breathing dragon "novelty" piece of .
Edit:
Somewhere I had read 4 million was the number of AR pistols sold. Personally I think that is way high. Unless they are counting all that was ever sold from the beginning sans "brace".
There is no such thing as "intent to assemble" when it comes to SBR's; that ONLY applies to machine guns.The ATF may see that as "intent" to build an unregistered SBR. For example, if I own a registered M16 and want to keep a couple of M-16 disconnectors (full auto) for spares, but I also have a bunch AR15's then in ATF's way of thinking I'm intenting to convert one of those AR's into an unregistered machine gun just by having those spares under the same roof. Weird isn't it, but ATF will use stuff like this to jamb people up when they conduct a search and can't find anything else. So, if you take off the brace and the short barrel and build a rifle you need to check the regs to determine where you should store them, or whether you should even keep them.
With a pistol upper.Anyway, my guess is that an enormous number of AR pistols began life as stripped lowers.
Yeah assumably, but information about the upper you are planning to use is irrelevant to the 4473 or the government or anyone else's ability to determine whether that stripped lower became a pistol or a carbine or a rifle or is laying in someone's safe still in the package.With a pistol upper.
The ATF may see that as "intent" to build an unregistered SBR. For example, if I own a registered M16 and want to keep a couple of M-16 disconnectors (full auto) for spares, but I also have a bunch AR15's then in ATF's way of thinking I'm intenting to convert one of those AR's into an unregistered machine gun just by having those spares under the same roof. Weird isn't it, but ATF will use stuff like this to jamb people up when they conduct a search and can't find anything else. So, if you take off the brace and the short barrel and build a rifle you need to check the regs to determine where you should store them, or whether you should even keep them.
A pistol lower can become a rifle, but not the other way.Yeah assumably, but information about the upper you are planning to use is irrelevant to the 4473 or the government or anyone else's ability to determine whether that stripped lower became a pistol or a carbine or a rifle or is laying in someone's safe still in the package.
what he saidA pistol lower can become a rifle, but not the other way.
I sold my pistol upper, and took off the brace & rebuilt it into a carbine,
Easy Peasy
A pistol lower can become a rifle, but not the other way.
I sold my pistol upper, and took off the brace & rebuilt it into a carbine,
Easy Peasy
That’s not what that “intended” means.Intention is written into the law in defining a rifle.
(7)The term "rifle" means a weapon designed or redesigned, made or remade, and intended to be fired from the shoulder and designed or redesigned and made or remade to use the energy of an explosive to fire only a single projectile through a rifled bore for each single pull of the trigger.(8)The term "short-barreled rifle" means a rifle having one or more barrels less than sixteen inches in length and any weapon made from a rifle (whether by alteration, modification, or otherwise) if such weapon, as modified, has an overall length of less than twenty-six inches.
I shouldn't have to 'register' either configuration in the first place.Also, why register anything with a brace on it when you can just SBR it with a much better stock, or go back to the old-style tube.