Posted on 11/19/2003 11:25:32 AM PST by mykdsmom
Edited on 04/22/2004 12:37:53 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
A new career awaits Democratic presidential candidates: offering advice to hunters.
Tuesday, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean explained his support for extending the assault weapons ban next year because
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A similar process is required for almost all semi auto rifles. It takes some time to do the conversion and it is illegal unless you are a class 2 manufacturer.
Mike
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That's an old wives tale. What would happen is the firing pin would slide into the primer. The firing would be haphazard. In a nodern inertial firing pin system you would get nothing. To operate effectively, a fully automatic rifle employs a delay system in which the pin hits the cartrige after the breech is closed and locked.
I know a fellow who had to hunt his first year, starting out, with a borrowed SKS and suitable softpoint ammo. He got his limit that season (six deer).
Apparently the 7.62x39 (same cartridge as the AK series) will do the job quite thoroughly. It is, after all, ballistically very close to the .30-30, one of the most successful deer-hunting cartridges of all time.
That might get you a rifle that fires until the magazine is empty. And I believe you mean the "sear"
These are made in Utah, Robarm also makes pretty fancy AK-type rifles.
www.robarm.com
Contemporary semi-autos such as AK's and AR-15s do require replacement of several parts to be converted, and this is critical, also require irreversible and easily visible drilling and/or machining of the serial-numbered receiver. Anyone with rudimentary tool skills and some mechanical aptitude could create an illegal full-auto or select-fire weapon from available parts, but there has been no legal way to do this, even with BATF tax stamp, since 1986 when they froze the available supply of transferable machine guns. It's not easy and there is no turning back, once a gun has been so modified it will forever be illegal and can never be sold or openly displayed again.
Ultimately the question of whether a particular semi-auto can be 'readily converted' is a subjective one, as some people could never accomplish it and others might think milling an entire gun out of a block of metal is easy.
Whether or not a gun can or cannot be converted or manufactured illegally is not a relevant point. We cannot punish people for things they might do if they happened to be criminally inclined. This is dangerously bad law.
The illegal part would be the least of your worries. Altering only the sear would most likely cause the firearm to fire out of battery. It is doubtful you would survive the magazine with the types of rifles discussed in this thread. Due to a mechanical failure, I faced a similar situation with an out of battery round that resulted in a catastrophic case rupture (I am very lucky to still be able to count to twenty one!). Mechanically speaking, none of the rifles discussed are readily convertible without the parts specifically made for fully automatic applications. Given the number of machining operations necessary to make these parts, I'd rather build up a new firearm from scratch.
I had a .22 rifle go full auto on me once, its next stop was the gunsmith.
If it fires from a closed bolt, ie, the bolt is locked to the barral, then the hammer strikes the back of the pin, these are more difficult to adjust to full auto. The seer usually holds the hammer back as the bolt is in recoil, then when the trigger is released, the back seer engages the hammer until the trigger is pulled once more. In a closed bolt full auto, the front seer grabs the hammer in recoil, then the back seer also grabs the hammer, but releases it through a lever or cam action, depending on the mechanism, a split second after the bolt rotates locked, allowing the hammer to strike the pin once again, repeating until the mag is dry.
If one simply files the back seer, as noted above, the hammer simply follows the bolt home. In some rifles, this will cause a slam fire (automatic as long as the trigger is held down), in others, like the M1 garand, it simply results in one round fired, then a chambered, but unfired round with a small dent in the primer, quite a dangerous situation. The harder the primer, the harder it is to get a slam fire.
There are rifles, which I will enumerate to you privately if desired, which can be "modified" quite functionally with a paper clip in the right location.
Some rifles, like the sks, will fire full auto when the bolt is dirty to the point that the pin is frozen in the bolt, thereby causing repeated slam fires. Very dangerous!!
Other rifles, indeed do need to be gutted, machined, then refitted with proper parts.
If one has some mechanical smarts, and access to some shop tools, many changes, mostly illegal, can be rendered to most weapons.
Which has ballistics similar to the 5.56 NATO round, depending on which version of each basic type one is speaking of. The round probably wouldn't even exit, depending on shot placement of course. It could tear up a lot of meat though. Both the 5.45 and 5.56 (.223) are designed to yaw after striking flesh. (they become hydrodynamically unstable). They also often break up. The 5.56 is slightly heavier and slightly faster, but not enough to really matter much, at least until you go to the newer 62gr 5.56, which then are slighly slower than the 53gr 5.45 rounds. (All in their military loadings) See Wound Ballistics
Bottom line, your 5.45x39 is no more appropriate for larger sized deer than the 5.56, although both will do the job if you can do yours.
But if you've got that, you can build at the very least, a submachine gun, from scratch. (Or use existing barrels and do the rest from scratch, which would make it even easier).
Bottom line, the prohibitions on full auto weaponry are just as unconstittutional as other gun control. Under the so called (and bogus) Supreme Court "Miller" test, they are probably even more so that those banning so called "Saturday Night Specials".
L
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