If it wont accept an AR15 upper, and this includes having an AR15 upper taped or glued or stapled onto the PAR lower, even for one successful shot, then it's got nothing to do with an AR15 and should be (by law) treated as an entirely new rifle.
If it wont accept an AR15 upper, and this includes having an AR15 upper taped or glued or stapled onto the PAR lower, even for one successful shot, then it's got nothing to do with an AR15 and should be (by law) treated as an entirely new rifle.
Full capacity magazines is a big one, yes, but as well there's the ability to have true SBR setups depending on what the stroke length is needed to cycle the action. Non-restricted status, assuming it doesn't get railroaded into being called an AR variant, would infinitely increase the ease of ownership. I know for a lot of guys Restricted status is no big problem because they only shoot at ranges anyways and always drive there, but for a huge portion of the population the ability to shoot on crown or private land is considerable boon. Even if they only shoot at ranges, not having to worry about the extra hassle of double-locking everything and carrying around paperwork is good.Can you tell me in which situation(s) these would have the advantage over the semi-auto AR (or really, any other semi-auto black rifle, restricted or non-restricted).
30 rounds (proprietary) mags would be the only one, capacity wise.
My new truck gun.
Random curiousity: how long of a stroke would be necessary to cycle the action properly? I'm wondering, if this winds up being classified NR (as it should), how short of a barrel one can realistically use on it.
Nutnfancy does a review on the rifle. Looks like it has a really short stroke.
Still very interested...
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=d8KMZpzNZQo
Interesting Rifle, I had not heard of this before, but I would be very surprised if it is not classified as restricted in Canada. The S&W M&P 15-22 is restricted, they consider it a variant of the AR-15 simply because it looks like an AR-15 and it uses an AR trigger. This PAR also looks like an AR and uses an AR trigger and an AR bolt. In the video review he also says the PAR takes standard AR-15 mags, is there a separate Canadian version that uses a different mag?
Interesting Rifle, I had not heard of this before, but I would be very surprised if it is not classified as restricted in Canada. The S&W M&P 15-22 is restricted, they consider it a variant of the AR-15 simply because it looks like an AR-15 and it uses an AR trigger. This PAR also looks like an AR and uses an AR trigger and an AR bolt. In the video review he also says the PAR takes standard AR-15 mags, is there a separate Canadian version that uses a different mag?
Go back and read my 1st post in this thread - I don't think I could have been any clearer when I said "pump-action in the AR platform"??
Your comparison to a pump-action shotgun is comparing apple to oranges.
Can you tell me in which situation(s) these would have the advantage over the semi-auto AR (or really, any other semi-auto black rifle, restricted or non-restricted).
30 rounds (proprietary) mags would be the only one, capacity wise.
Export version has a proprietary magazine for the PAR, it does not us a AR bolt carrier group & the upper and lower will not interchange with a AR15 pattern rifle...
gadget
Export version has a proprietary magazine for the PAR, it does not us a AR bolt carrier group & the upper and lower will not interchange with a AR15 pattern rifle...
gadget



























