ya scratched it.
but it sure looks purdy
jp8775 wrote:I am building another AK right now, I went and purchased all the tools for it the last time around. Some were pretty expensive like the jigs and rivet presses. They do make it a lot easier to do it right though. The one I built last is a full auto and registered machine gun to me. AK is one of the most fun machine guns I have to shoot in my opinion. To make it legal and not a machine gun it has to have 5 us made parts in the build. It also cannot contain any od the auto parts. The us made parts were about $60 or so to make it legal. Of course I had to get a Nodak spud receiver.
Deputyhiro wrote:jp8775 wrote:I am building another AK right now, I went and purchased all the tools for it the last time around. Some were pretty expensive like the jigs and rivet presses. They do make it a lot easier to do it right though. The one I built last is a full auto and registered machine gun to me. AK is one of the most fun machine guns I have to shoot in my opinion. To make it legal and not a machine gun it has to have 5 us made parts in the build. It also cannot contain any od the auto parts. The us made parts were about $60 or so to make it legal. Of course I had to get a Nodak spud receiver.
Can I ask how you went about registering your own machine gun? Transferable auto sear? It was my understanding that no machine guns could be built / registered by civilians post 86.
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