Jump to content

Shandlanos

Contributor
  • Content Count

    3,990
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    5

Posts posted by Shandlanos

  1. Not exactly - RWC, the former importer of Kalashnikov Concern products (including firearms and accessories produced at Izhmash) plans to begin production of AK rifles, and possibly shotguns, in the US, using the Kalashnikov brand name.

    By executive edict, Izhmash/Kalashnikov Concern can't and won't have any interest in the venture.

  2. In-state transfer just takes a single tax stamp.

    Once the transferee receives the approved Form 4, it's registered to them - you'd better deliver it :)   It's never been clear to me exactly how long you have to do so, as technically it's not longer registered to you.There's probably case law on the subject, if not actual regulations.

    I don't remember if you have to sign the outbound Form 4, too tired to dig one out right now. I don't believe you do, just the transferee.

  3.  

    well did the trade and picked up the mini 14 today, it's a stainless 182 series that has seen very very little use and has been maintained like it belonged to a former Marine (prior owner was).

    Mine is a 182 series as well.

     

    One nice thing on the AC-556 is that the burst resets when the trigger is released, and you have the choice of burst and full auto.  Not so on M-16/M4.  There are those times when FA is more useful than burst. (like that Hind-D taking a bead on you)

     

    I've seen select-fire AR platforms with both a burst and a full-auto setting - they're just not standard or even common.

     

    The AC556 is interesting because the safety is separate from the selector, unlike the AR and AK, where the safety and selector are the same.

  4.  

    Curiously everyone is out of stock?

    The big question for manufacturers is "Do I make more?".  If I'm in the cartridge manufacturing business and I'm making M855 for the military I'm a happy camper.  Then the military sales dry up but I can still sell to the civilian market.  Everybody has 2 or 3 ARs these days so life is still good.

     

    But now there is a threat of a ban on manufacture, sale, and transfer to citizens.  If I knew there would be a grandfather for ammo made before the ban I'd crank up the line and make as much as possible.  But what if there is no grandfather?  What if they just say "no more sales"?

     

    There is no grandfather clause, for anyone with an FFL. As soon as ATF formally declares it AP pistol ammo, it becomes illegal for anyone with an FFL to transfer it to anyone who is not either an approved LE/mil agency or has an approved reason for possession (like body armor testing), or another FFL holder.

    • Like 1
  5. Newer ones are good rifles, but a poor value versus an AR. Mags, furniture, and pretty much every aftermarket part is more expensive and less likely to exist versus an AR. The rifles themselves cost more, most replacement parts can only be purchased from the manufacturer at high cost, and the older rifles suffer from a severe accuracy problem - if you only fire a few rounds in a minute, it isn't problematic. For some reason, once the rifle gets hot the accuracy goes to shit. I've fired a few older Mini-14s and an AC556 (select fire mini14), all of which suffered from the same problem. In burst fire, two or three short bursts heated the rifle enough that the spread on a shoot-and-see target became noticeably larger.

    • Like 1
  6. XM855 can be reloaded and reproduced easily by hand. Manufacturers will find a way to recreate the M855 load without calling it M855. If it is the steel core that bothers the gov, I would remind them that that steel core actually does less damage to tissue. I would much rather take an 855 round to a non vital point than many of the "sporting use" ammunition. It is the difference between passing though cleanly, or making a mess of things with fragmentation and expansion. All 5.56 is going to defeat body armor anyway minus plates so really what is the difference?

    It's stupid as hell. There is no logical point. It's an excuse to ban more shit. That's it.

     

    Just like the FDA pounces on any opportunity to classify and ban a new intoxicating substance as soon as it's invented, the ATF will always find new way to justify its existence by straining to invent new crimes.

  7. I ran some 124 gr. Speer through it, no problems. I think that stiff recoil spring might need to be loosened up and the 115 gr. Blazer Brass and PMC might just be underpowered for it. I'm going to try some 124 gr. S&B next (Czech pistol,Czech ammo) That's what they use at the CZ factory. I think most of the European manufactured ammo is loaded to NATO spec and the BB and PMC might just be watered down by comparison. The difference in bullet weight might be a factor too.  

     

    On a side note, I noticed during disassembly that there is a rub mark on the ejector where it appears to be making metal to metal contact with the slide. Is this normal?

    Yes.

  8.  

    Sad to hear this. I own one and liked it so much I purchased one for my oldest daughter. Have not experienced any trouble. Maybe now that these have been on the market awhile CZ is getting careless. I hope that I'm wrong. I have been eying the PO9. I will be really interested in the correction and cause of these failures.

     

    Reading your post as well as several others on different forums and youtube, I'm starting to think it might be user error on my part. Like some little knit-picking thing I'm not doing right. It seems like I'm the only one having these issues. Everyone else is saying they haven't had a single hiccup with theirs; it's just strange.

     

    It's unlikely you're doing anything wrong. It's much more likely you got the rare lemon. It happens sometimes, no manufacturer is immune.

  9. Definitely strange. Bulk custom fastener are pretty damn cheap. I'm guessing one of two things - they bought commercial off the shelf bolts that were close enough, or there are variances in fit on different firearms, some requiring longer bolts.

    Since you say you aren't good at it, here's a super easy way to do it - place painters tape on the stock around where the screws protrude to prevent marking the stock. Color the protruding section of the screws with a paint pen. Remove the screws, and grind or cut off the color sections, using a bench grinder, a dremel tool, or even a whetstone. the threads will be slightly deformed right at the bottom - cut away any excess material blocking the threads using a wire wheel, if there's any solid material still blocking the threads clean it up with a needle file.

    I promise, it's very easy. I doubt anyone here will know the diameter, thread pitch and length of your kushnapup stock screws. For exact measurements you'll probably have to contact the company - or you can attempt to fix the issue yourself.

    • Like 1
  10.  

    Those are extremely unsafe to bumpfire - there is no mechanism for preventing an out-of-battery detonation, and the cycle is long enough that you can very easily pull the trigger while the bolt is still out of battery. I got a fair amount of brass shrapnel in my right hand doing exactly that with one of these pistols.

    Was this a mpa or another brand

     

    It was an MPA.

     

    To be clear, I'm not talking trash on the brand or on this ad, they're actually more reliable and better-made than the older ones, IMO - they use a feed ramp and as a result will reliably feed a wider variety of ammo, too. It's just a fact of the design that bumpfiring is unsafe.

  11. Those are extremely unsafe to bumpfire - there is no mechanism for preventing an out-of-battery detonation, and the cycle is long enough that you can very easily pull the trigger while the bolt is still out of battery. I got a fair amount of brass shrapnel in my right hand doing exactly that with one of these pistols.

  12. Hard to say without better pics, maybe a Daewoo XK8? Could also be a FAMAS variant.

    There aren't too many bullpup rifles out there with a trigger guard that encloses all four fingers. It looks nothing like a Steyr AUG and I don't think it's a Tavor, and while I think the Chinese make something vaguely similar, I don't remember seeing anything about a model in 5.56 that accepts STANAG magazines.

    Whatever it is, it's almost certainly in 5.56, and accepts STANAG M16/M4 mags.

    Hope someone else knows more than I - would love to see it identified.

×
×
  • Create New...