QUOTE (BobAsh @ Dec 5 2008, 10:07 PM)

The X-Y reinforcement around the FCG pins (as shown on my gun) IS a desirable feature. The third "Y" stamp marks the illegal 3rd hole, so obviously it's problematic. It is more rare, because it is a mis-marketed Machine giun Receiver. Tony nor I have ever seen one in person.
Just for the sake of historical perspective, Saiga's aren't the first AK's to come into the country with the extra Y stamp. All SAR 1's that came into the country (starting about 2001) had the Y:

I dont' know about SAR 2's and 3's, but I assume they all used this same receiver. I believe there were tens of thousands of these rifles imported between '01 and '05(?). Also, the recently imported STG-2000's (basically a really nice WASR) has the Y stamp too:

I don't know how many of these have come into the country, but they were cheap so I'd imagine their import numbers were pretty high.
And then of course you've got the tens of thousands of WASR2's, 3's and 10's that have come into the country since about 2005. I don't know how many cargo containers of WASR's have been brought into the country by Century Arms, but you know it's gotta be a big big number (WASR's have been the cheapest & most available AK's at every gunshow for the last 3 years). I think all of these were Y'd too:

So, when it comes down to it, the ATF would basically have to ban the majority of AK's imported into this country since 2001 if they were gonna start nit-picking about the Y stamp - We're talking about huge numbers here.
None of us know what the ATF is gonna do - so it would be dumb to make any assumptions about what is or isn't going to be "legal" by some future ATF standards yet to be written... But I can say that if they ban AK's based on the Y stamp, this would be a huge and unprecedented attack considering the number of rifles that would be affected.
So I'm not going to get worried about it.
As for how rare the dimpled and Y'd Saigas are? They are really rare. I'm just spitballing here based on my personal observations over the past year-and-a-half (having handled somewhere around one-hundred different Saigas in 7.62 and 5.56 caliber), here's how I'd break it down: First, I'd say that dimpled Saiga's represent about 1/10th of the overall population of 7.62 and 5.56 Saiga's imported in 2006. And of those dimpled Saiga's, I'd say that 1/10th of those had the extra Y stamp. So for whatever it's worth, I'd make a somewhat educated guess that so-called "dimpled + Y" Saigas represent somewhere in the neighborhood of 1% of the overall population of 7.62 and 5.56 Saigas imported in 2006. We'd have to ask RAA how many 7.62 and 5.56 Saiga's were imported in 2006 to get an idea of the raw number of dimpled + Y Saiga's are out there. But as an example, let's just make up a reasonable number and say that total number of imported Saigas in 2006 was 20K units. At a 1:100 ratio, that would mean that only 200 of the dimpled + Y Saigas exist in the US, which would make them about 5 times more rare than the Arsenal/Legion SGL-10. Again this is purely a guess based on a single person's observations of gun shows around the Pacific NW, but I don't think it's a completely unreasonable estimation.
For about a year I've been tracking the dimpled + Y'd Saigas that have show up in forums across the web. So far I've observed a total of 13 known examples (and about 3 more that Viking Kitty claimed to have but I never verified). Every one of the known examples is a 2006 import, with serial numbers falling within a range of about 4000 units, which would tend to support the "Venezuelan Overrun" speculation that has circulated over the past year. I have no idea if the story about "military overrun receiver beings mixed in with civilian factory production lines" is true, but if you look at the timing of the 100K unit AK-103 order from Hugo Chavez in 2006, it would seem to fit:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1651709/postsEven if this is true, there is nothing inherently illegal about them. They are the same Saiga rifles that RAA has been legally importing for years, with a Y stamp that has been coming in on Romanian rifles since at least 2001. But of course if it is true, it would certainly make these rifles the "most real" Russian AK's that have ever come into the country wearing the Saiga brand - after all, these were supposed to go to Hugo Chavez! That's flippin cool, and is something you can't say about the Legion SGL-10's!
This is just my personal opinion, but I believe that these "dimpled + Y" Saigas are the most desirable and rare Saigas of all, and I don't think it's likely that the ATF would ban tens of thousands of imported AK's based solely on the presence of a Y stamp. If they did, it would be an action of unprecedented proportions that would certainly change the landscape of gun ownership rights in the US. I'm not saying it couldn't happen, but alot of people woudl be affected and a big, big stink would result.

And by the way, for those who haven't seen any, here's a couple I'm buidling now (get a good look at 'em Mr. ATF man

):

-Thirtycal