Correct I skimmed the text. There are far easier ways to improvise those two platforms for full auto, than, trigger packs that would require machine work to install. Hypothetically, it could be as simple as a coat hanger / wiper blade bent on the correct fashion, or a shim fabricated from the brass insert in a stripper clip, in Minecraft. If you were trying to arm a belligerent force with local weapons.
Just because you can't put a standard full-auto trigger in a civilian lower it does not mean that you can't design and make one that will fit, same goes for civilian AK's.
Any half decent gunsmith or machinist could make it and anyone with some mechanical aptitude could design it, illegal as all hell but not that hard...
Hell they are 3D printing full auto rears/sears for civilian glocks and those have been designed by hobbyists.........
You're 100% correct. And if you read my reply, you saw that I said as much, except that it is THEORETICALLY much easier/quicker to fabricate a DIAS, that works in a civilian weapon, from easily scavenged parts than designing and smuggling in thousands of custom made trigger assemblies, to arm an insurgent force.
I have experienced two worn sears, once in the USMC and once out. Both were full auto. Glorious! But both had to be fixed and were so I didn’t get in trouble. Kek.
Full auto is nice for very up-close engagements, like across the room distances, but it becomes a hindrance at even moderate distances. The work to modify a normally semi-automatic rifle into a select fire weapon is greater than the value gained by the firearm now being fully automatic.
I'm guessing those are the "airsoft" glock select fire mechanisms people were getting busted buying off of wish around that time. However, with the ambiguity in the article, not specifying what exactly they seized, and the opaque packaging, those could be anything not 922(r) compliant. Like flash suppressors, which technically would have been "assault rifle" parts not to be confused with "assault weapon" which is a made up term.
Drop-in trigger upgrades and "rifle supressors for more covert operations"? Whoever wrote this has no clue about those weapons systems.
I am pretty sure you did not listen to the video considering you commented 4 minutes after it was posted.
Correct I skimmed the text. There are far easier ways to improvise those two platforms for full auto, than, trigger packs that would require machine work to install. Hypothetically, it could be as simple as a coat hanger / wiper blade bent on the correct fashion, or a shim fabricated from the brass insert in a stripper clip, in Minecraft. If you were trying to arm a belligerent force with local weapons.
Just because you can't put a standard full-auto trigger in a civilian lower it does not mean that you can't design and make one that will fit, same goes for civilian AK's. Any half decent gunsmith or machinist could make it and anyone with some mechanical aptitude could design it, illegal as all hell but not that hard... Hell they are 3D printing full auto rears/sears for civilian glocks and those have been designed by hobbyists.........
You're 100% correct. And if you read my reply, you saw that I said as much, except that it is THEORETICALLY much easier/quicker to fabricate a DIAS, that works in a civilian weapon, from easily scavenged parts than designing and smuggling in thousands of custom made trigger assemblies, to arm an insurgent force.
Yeah. I interpreted it as a modified sear.
I have experienced two worn sears, once in the USMC and once out. Both were full auto. Glorious! But both had to be fixed and were so I didn’t get in trouble. Kek.
Full auto is nice for very up-close engagements, like across the room distances, but it becomes a hindrance at even moderate distances. The work to modify a normally semi-automatic rifle into a select fire weapon is greater than the value gained by the firearm now being fully automatic.
kek
I'm guessing those are the "airsoft" glock select fire mechanisms people were getting busted buying off of wish around that time. However, with the ambiguity in the article, not specifying what exactly they seized, and the opaque packaging, those could be anything not 922(r) compliant. Like flash suppressors, which technically would have been "assault rifle" parts not to be confused with "assault weapon" which is a made up term.