Posted on 11/09/2012 4:41:12 PM PST by Tail Gunner John
I have now gotten religion on the need to purchase my first automatic rifle. I have very little personal experience to draw upon in making my selection. I'm looking for an economical but reliable weapon. My goal is to buy the rifle and lay in a reasonable supply of ammunition for less than $1000. Any thoughts or advice would be greatly appreciated.
For this money, the closest thing you can do is get a “SlideFire” stock, which is a controlled way of doing the bump fire techniques, and having had one I know it works. Here is my brother shooting a semi-automatic AK74 with the Slidefire stock:
http://youtu.be/eXU3-H0jaSA
I can start with LOL.
You need to research this a little better. Class III license will eat up 2/3rds of your budget, then your DROS.
Then go to Gunbroker.com and see what you can get for around $2,500 that’s reliable.
You’re also going to need a tool kit to maintain your weapon.
There’s a bunch of other things you need to consider and a couple hundred rounds to practice will cost $.25 cents per round to $1.50 or more depending on what arm you eventually settle on.
Good luck....
I don’t know.
I have seen guys bump fire saiga 12’s but I bet its a bitch.
All of the above...
See post 38. The recoil almost pushes the guy out of frame.
Class III AR-15 full-auto, suppressed, will cost $5-7,000 easy, if you can find a good one. I have several, plus Class III AR-10s and won’t part with any.
PS - That was 2001 prices. They’ll be well-upwards of $13-15k, if you can even find one, in this day and time.
Hawhoo!
No, if he doesn’t have enough firearms experience to even get the get the terminology right, he needs to take a class on how to operate a firearm safely before someone gets hurt.
I bet it works better on an AK 74 than an Ak 47, but I think the short stock on the AK makes it difficult to use proficiently.
Yow, that looks like some fun w/12ga!
You don’t find it strange that the OP started a thread with a vague undefined term, no further elucidation on it and hasn’t replied once? I’m sure your superior brilliance will enlighten us all about that. ROFTLOL
Since you are starting out, I recommend a Ruger 10/22, available for under $250:
Then buy a lot of 22 ammo:
1000 rounds costs about $60. I’d suggest buying 5,000 rounds for a start. That puts your total cost at around $550.
When you run out of ammo, you will A) be a decent shot, but not great, and B) be ready to spend a bit more for a higher power gun. But the 22 is the basis for good shooting, because it is the only way to shoot enough cheap enough to get good at shooting.
And if I was a bad guy, I would NOT want to face 10 rounds of 22 ammo fired in about 5 seconds. And with very little practice, you could aim for the face...
You should have bought a semi-auto AR-15 about 6 months ago...prices will be jacked up from now until they ban them.I paid too much ($1100.00)in 2008 and I still have it and glad I did...Because right now I couldn’t afford it. You need to jump through a lot of hoops to get the license for full auto. So buy semi and convert if you feel the need when the SHTF. By then the law won’t matter.
For a first rifle of any caliber, a Ruger 10/22 is hard to beat, and it's a "semiauto". Probably fits the $1000 budget for rifle, scope, case, cleaning kit, tools, eye and ear protection, and gun club membership, (at least here in my hometown), and some money left over for maybe a couple, or maybe several, 500 round bricks of ammo.
Obviously you mean a semi-auto.
Tried my buddy’s recently...I was surprised how well it works.
I can still disassemble and reassemble an M-60 blindfolded. It’s been over 20 years.
I plan on getting a sig mosquito tomorrow. I’m gonna have fun with this one.
http://www.sigsauer.com/CatalogProductDetails/mosquito.aspx
It Rocks!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.