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- Jun 25, 2020
Tl;dr your brace is now a NFA regulated device if you're not disabled.ATF's new pistol brace ruling dropped just in time for SHOT Show.
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Tl;dr your brace is now a NFA regulated device if you're not disabled.ATF's new pistol brace ruling dropped just in time for SHOT Show.
Oh don't worry, you can still put a brace on them.Tl;dr your brace is now a NFA regulated device if you're not disabled.
Yeah, he had a pretty dour reading and I can't see any reason to disagree. It's a concerted effort to push gun bans all across shitlib america along with the ATF pulling this, and there'll be no effective resistance to any of it.Matt from Fuddbusters did a stream on the ruling:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=Xg4RnTWiazE:1100I trust his reading and interpretation (as a practicing lawyer who takes on firearm-focused legal cases) more than any of the myriad of clickbait shit-tubers who will milk this for views, and walk the gun 'community' into the DOJ/ATF's trap of calling this a "brace ban".
Their carbines are really their best product. You might kinda limpwrist the pistols briefly if you're not used to the slightly different recoil and how they balance, but in carbine form that's not a problem.The only Hi-Point I'd consider buying for myself & can heartily recommend are their .40 carbines; those things handle good, are built well, don't jam (at least not unless it's with a trashed magazine), and make full use of the cartridge. Although now 9mm has more options which equal the .40, I'd still rather have the oddball.
Wonder if a simiar logic could hold for braces somehow?ATF's bumpstock ban has been shot down by the 5th Circuit on the basis the ATF ignored their own definition of machine gun and the ambiguous nature of ATF memos previously stating bumpstocks were perfectly legal.
The ATF are trying to redefine what isn't a pistol and are I don't know how many contradictory memos deep on braces. So, there are definitely parallels. Cargill v Garland has to be kicked up to the SCOTUS(and win) for it to really matter though.Wonder if a simiar logic could hold for braces somehow?
Since you have an RH-10 and are familiar with this particular AK, I have a question: I bought a fighter break I'd like to install. This rifle doesn't have that "button" at the front of the barrel so I literally just unscrew the old break and put the new one on. Do I need to use shims to get the ports perfectly aligned or can I just unscrew one and screw on another?@Club Sandwich covered the high points. RS is in business, but supply/demand is so crazy, they're always OoS - I know mostly because I have a Century RH-10 (pretty much your M-10, but with worse QC) that has the same goofy high rail. If you're just looking to mount a red dot or reflex sight, you've got other options - multiple gas tube/UHG rails (Ultimak, etc.) are out there and Attero Arms makes a series of mounts that replace the rear sight leaf while retaining a fixed notch that will lower cowitness with a low-mount RDS. If you want something magnified, I'd hold out for the RS Regulate stuff.
As for mounting stocks and other furniture, AKs aren't going to be drop-in like ARs are. Expect to do some fitting on most furniture regardless of vendor - files (and occasionally a Dremel) will be your friends here.
Also, I saw x39 soft point ammo mentioned earlier as being hard to get, but PPU SP ammo is pretty easy to get your hands on (if not particularly cheap) still.
14x1mm LH locking nut (or jam nut). there isn't enough shoulder on the barrel for a shim or crush washer to be useful. thread on the locking nut completely finger tight, then thread and time the muzzle device appropriately. add a dot of rocksett to a couple threads immediately behind the muzzle device, then loosen (or tighten) the locking nut against the rear of the muzzle device until 30 in-lb is achieved (or hand tight and a quarter more) you have around 2-5 minutes of working time to ensure alignment before rocksett hardens.I bought a fighter break I'd like to install
That sucks ass. Hopefully with the bumpstock ruling going our way, the S.C. will stop this.Tl;dr your brace is now a NFA regulated device if you're not disabled.
Their carbines are really their best product. You might kinda limpwrist the pistols briefly if you're not used to the slightly different recoil and how they balance, but in carbine form that's not a problem.
Never change, fam.My SKS set up is nearly complete, as you can see. Just got the sling and chest rig, the two clips of Fort Scott act as my home defense rounds, and I got 38 more clips in storage, along with more rounds, mostly Russian surplus, a little over 300 in my horde.
View attachment 4264370
The cost of .45 has come down & .40 is either scarce/expensive enough so that I've considered it, but the carbine's barrel-length still makes .40 (or hot 9x19) more worthwhile, to me at least.I've always wanted a Hi Point carbine in .45, since it's affordable from where I'm at, that and a dollar store Tommy gun sounds like WAY too much fun. It'd be a nice compliment to my SKS and would allow me to have way more dakka in exchange for range. Even if they don't like hollowpoints that well, as Guns and Ammo reported, it's in 45, a 230 grain slug will work nicely.
These times aren't all so bad. Who makes doublestacked 1911s these days by the way? Besides STI International International, they don't look enough like 1911s and I want a more old fashioned look.The cost of .45 has come down
Well, most .45 loads don't gain that much from having a real long barrel, you get the most out of the kind of length they had on the old Greaseguns and Thompsons.& .40 is either scarce/expensive enough so that I've considered it, but the carbine's barrel-length still makes .40 (or hot 9x19) more worthwhile, to me at least.
Here's 10 double stack .45s, but not 1911s.Who makes doublestacked 1911s these days by the way? Besides STI International International, they don't look enough like 1911s and I want a more old fashioned look.
That's why I'd stick to .40/9mm with ghetto PCC carbines like the Hi-Point, or more the bougie choice with a CZ.Well, most .45 loads don't gain that much from having a real long barrel, you get the most out of the kind of length they had on the old Greaseguns and Thompsons.
I'm not a Hi-Point owner, but the hate they get annoys me immensely. I've seen so many videos trying to show how trash they are/destroy them and they always come out on top. American made, good warranty, and tough as nails. I don't recall who said it, "The Hi Point in your drawer is better than the Glock on lay away"Most Hi-point owners buy them and then almost forget about them or use them and quickly throw them away.
I agree that a Hi-point is the cheapest pistol you can get that's not trash or dangerous to use. They're big, blocky and overbuilt for thr calibers it's offered in but that's fine.
The worst I've seen of Hi-Points is that they jam a lot, but usually this seems to be remedied by changing your grip. Like you said, better than the Glock on lay away.I'm not a Hi-Point owner, but the hate they get annoys me immensely. I've seen so many videos trying to show how trash they are/destroy them and they always come out on top. American made, good warranty, and tough as nails. I don't recall who said it, "The Hi Point in your drawer is better than the Glock on lay away"
I don't think anyone who tries to destroy one is testing their reliability & strength; those facts have long been established, even with complete neophytes & normies.I'm not a Hi-Point owner, but the hate they get annoys me immensely. I've seen so many videos trying to show how trash they are/destroy them and they always come out on top. American made, good warranty, and tough as nails. I don't recall who said it, "The Hi Point in your drawer is better than the Glock on lay away"
Yeah, as said, they balance and recoil a little bit different, but you adapt to it. On occasion you might get a magazine where you'll want to carefully tweak the feed lips with some needle nose pliers. The .45 magazines are copied from 1911 ones, so you can actually cut a new notch in one and it'll lock in and feed, there's a replacement magazine release to let you use unmodified 1911 mags instead of Hi-Point ones, but it was like $50 before shipping, which feels high.The worst I've seen of Hi-Points is that they jam a lot, but usually this seems to be remedied by changing your grip.
Speaking of spending money.
View attachment 4269824
That High Tower bullpup stock actually looks cool, supposedly it's better in quality and function in every way to the factory one, and being more in line makes it recoil easier.
Speaking of furniture that cost as much as the rifle; remember the Promag Archangel? Those things were like $300-400 when new, and around that time most SKS cost about the same.Putting a $250 stock on a Hi-Point feels a little funny, and aside from the length of pull looking long, I can only imagine how the trigger is like. If you've ever seen those Beretta Storm looking stocks which ATI used to make, apparently those were one of the few things which would void your warranty, because too many people damaged the carbine installing them, and I wonder if the same is possible here.
Might be worth it for some, as this is the only option I know of for someone who wants a bullpup in 10mm Auto, and High Tower are apparently working on double-stack magazines for using with this stock. I have no idea if they'll ever make that happen, but with the magwell using a removable insert planned for that purpose, I guess that would let a tinkerer have a go at it themselves.
Thanks man and thanks for letting me know about the sights. Haven't thought too hard on it honestly, but have ordered a cleaning kit for the old SKS to finally complete the set. That's also interesting to hear about the Hi-point with hollowpoints. Must depend on the ammo.Never change, fam.
But do any more thought on something like that Firesight fiber-optic front post?
Edit: Sucks, but the Williams sights are discontinued & mostly unavailable from the normal suppliers (Optics Planet, Brownells, etc). So far other options involve just slapping an ugly section of pic-rail & generic "tactical" tritium/fiber-optic sight block on top somewhere, and I can't find anything as unobtrusive as the Williams aperture.
The cost of .45 has come down & .40 is either scarce/expensive enough so that I've considered it, but the carbine's barrel-length still makes .40 (or hot 9x19) more worthwhile, to me at least.
Although if I ever built my dream PCC AR it'd definitely be .45 with a can.
As far as hollow-points go, I don't recall any Hi-Point that wasn't finicky about being fed JHP regardless of caliber (but .45 seems to be the pickiest). Unless they're polymer-tipped. YMMV.