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BattleRifleG3

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Everything posted by BattleRifleG3

  1. Saiga 410 - $160ish wholesale, tack on $30-50 for final price with dealer transfer and shipping. Same receiver, yes. P-grip conversion possible, yes. Legal, NO. 20rd mags... Can you imagine how low the thing would hang? I'm trying to find out if the 410's bolt is as strong as the 7.62, cause if so it could handle the pressures of 444 Marlin, which is a conversion I'd like to do and it would probably work with the same magazine. I know I once asked how old you were, and I forget now, but a word of advice is that some guns look and feel cool but the attention you give to t
  2. If factory mags are so expensive, think of how much production hi-caps would be. I'm working on a G3 mag conversion myself.
  3. I have the Saiga 308, and am looking into a G3 mag adaptor that involves permanent modification.
  4. The M14 mag conversion I've seen removes material from the trunion that holds back the bolt. I and others believe this is unsafe. I am working on an adaptor that basically becomes a new mag well and would accept mildly modified G3 mags. It wouldn't carve anything out of the trunion, but would involve permanent modification of the receiver, move the mag backwards, replace the mag catch with an AR type, and remove the cross post, replacing it with an external brace. More details as they come.
  5. I'm working on a design for an adaptor to use G3 mags, but it would require permanent, irreversible modification to the receiver. Using cheap G3 mags should be worth it if it works out. Will keep people posted.
  6. Ohio may say 3 is ok, but federal law that applies everywhere says no.
  7. No longer can you get a standard FFL without a business. Collectors can get a C&R FFL that only works for guns designated C&R. Notice the term C&R on many distributor sites, standing for Curio and Relic.
  8. 9mm Mak is ok for defense but make sure you use hollowpoint bullets, otherwise you won't get maximum energy transmission and you'll have an anemic round as opposed to a capable one. 7.62x25mm is best used on targets and hunting. It's not well developed for US CCW.
  9. Sadly, mags over 8rd don't yet exist for the Saiga 12. Perhaps when the ban dies a US manufacturer will make them. Meanwhile, I'm trying to figure out a conversion for a Saiga 308 to use G3 mags.
  10. The Saiga 12 cannot unfortunately be made to feed like an SKS. 1. You can only load a double stack mag by pushing straight down. Single stack must be loaded by sliding rounds in at the front. No can do with a fixed mag. Only the Mosin Nagant has a system to get around this. 2. The SKS does not have its piston affixed to the bolt carrier like the Saiga. The SKS can have its bolt retracted and the piston won't come too. If you can find a way around these, more power too you. But by that point, you might as well design a whole new gun. For the trouble it would take, I'd sugg
  11. FFL = Federal Firearms license That is for someone who deals in firearms as a business. The law says a gun must be shipped to an FFL. Not sure about fed law, but at least in PA an FFL must be used to transfer a handgun. The dealer is required by law to perform an instacheck by phone of the buyer for a clean record. The buyer must also fill out a form with personal info (name, address, place of birth, citizenship, etc) and furnish his drivers lisence. There is about a $5 fee for this paperwork on a governmental level. Now it costs the dealer a fee to have this license. He al
  12. You can modify the gun to fit any hi-cap mag if it has 10 or fewer foreign parts from a list, including the mag. You can modify a pre-ban mag to fit any gun as long as the mag can still work in the original gun. That is the law on mag and gun alterations. Altering a Saiga to accept hi-caps without US parts is ILLEGAL. Altering a Saiga to accept hi-caps and the end result having 10 or less listed foreign parts is LEGAL. Altering a mag to fit the Saiga so that it no longer works in the original is ILLEGAL Altering a mag to fit the Saiga but making sure it will still work in t
  13. I don't know the details of the technique of bump firing. I don't care for it myself. The purpose is to simulate full auto without having a gun that is full auto, which would be illegal, while bump firing is legal. The full auto parts are legal to own if you don't have an AK. Some people buy them for intellectual use, some for pre-approved law enforcement use, some for repair of the few registered AKMs, some use parts that were full auto but convert them to semi (this is shaky, for some it's still illegal to use them), some just to say "ooh, I got a full auto part, whoohoo!", some to us
  14. Note that the AUGs use a lot of plastic. More plastic than I'd be comforetable with. Like the hammer, I think. The Bush Bullpup is based on the reliable AR-18/180 that has been the base for many rifles that don't give it any credit. The HK G36 uses its gas system, as do a many others. My main deterrent from the Bushpup was weight. Overall weight, and butt weight. I prefer barrel heavy to butt heavy if the choice must be made. It should lean forward with one hand on the grip, not back. If this is not a deterrent to you, go for it. Note that long squishy triggers are genera
  15. After the Assault Weapon Ban expired in September, it would be legal. I don't see why it wouldn't work on 308.
  16. There are full auto / select fire parts out there for sale. It is NOT legal to use them or even have them along with a gun that can use them. Unless you want to pay $10,000 for a pre 1986 registered full auto AK, just accept that you'll have semi-auto only. You can simulate full auto by mastering a technique called bump-firing where you use the recoil of the gun to vibrate your finger instead of consciously pulling it each time. You can also get a crank attachment called a gat trigger that pulls the trigger repeatedly as you crank it. For all these purposes, a WASR-10 is proba
  17. Forend is more complicated but feasible, P-grip, FCG and buttstock are the same.
  18. Maadis are of varying quality, and are no longer imported. WASR-10 is a curent conversion of a current production rifle. They are not the best finished but they work reliably. They aren't the most accurate but are usually alright. From most of your inquiries, I'd say it'll work well for you. Better than a Maadi for sure. It or a Norinco AK would be a good choice if you are not about to do a Saiga conversion or prefer the standard AKM pattern and furniture.
  19. Bullet guides are only for magazine conversions. There is as of yet no commonly accepted conversion of Saiga 308s to hi-cap mags. Only to P-grip configuration. I believe the other steps are the same except that you also have to adapt your US made hammer to match the original with a notch part way up.
  20. Here's one for sale, at a super price. http://www.gunsamerica.com/guns/976464668.htm
  21. There are two bans The 1994 AWB applies to all guns, including domestic. One or two qualifying features (ie semi-auto rifle with detachable mag) and a list of restricted features, of which you may have only one (p-grip, etc) The 1989 Import ban has become a bit fluid, being wide open to expansion and reinterpretation, thus something new's banned every couple years, ie MAK-90s, FAL Sporters, etc. You can completely avoid this ban by having 10 or less imported parts from a list that starts with barrels and ends with furniture. This is where US compliant AK rifles come from. No way
  22. They were banned from importation years ago. <$1500 is a good deal on them now in good condition.
  23. HP will do more damage to soft targets, FMJ will do more damage to hard targets, because FMJ has more penetration and HP has more short term energy transmission to target. Basically, if the bullet stays in the target, it's transmitted all its energy. If it does it over a short space, for which an HP is better, you get more of an instantaneous shock at that point. If it does it over a long space, it's more spread out. If it leaves the target, you don't have maximum energy transmission to target. FMJ is designed to get through a target without transmitting all its energy. In the case of
  24. For the same price, a Mil Surp or two would have made me happy, but to each his own.
  25. The Saiga 308 is best for accuracy and hunting whitetail due to ballistics and inherent accuracy, as noted above. The advantages of the other two are inexpensive ammo for rapid fire, lower recoil, ability to convert to hi-cap mags, and lower price. For your listed uses, the 308 seems best.
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