VictoryRidgeCS
Regular
Beautiful!Here's mine. I'm actually thinking of selling this beauty to make room for another project... She's almost too pretty to let goView attachment 1002847
Beautiful!Here's mine. I'm actually thinking of selling this beauty to make room for another project... She's almost too pretty to let goView attachment 1002847
Overall it seems like a bad idea... but I don't think it would "ruin it for everyone". The Renegade is not "easily convertible". People can't do this conversion on their kitchen table at home.Lockhart Tactical made an Instagram post about offering services to make these semiauto, *legally* they claim, which kind of takes away the point of the Renegade in our current world and market; ruining it for everyone once it's deemed "easily convertible".
Yeah Iām super skeptical. It goes against the FRT. Iām concerned this will kill the renegade.Lockhart Tactical made an Instagram post about offering services to make these semiauto, *legally* they claim, which kind of takes away the point of the Renegade in our current world and market; ruining it for everyone once it's deemed "easily convertible".
Overall it seems like a bad idea... but I don't think it would "ruin it for everyone". The Renegade is not "easily convertible". People can't do this conversion on their kitchen table at home.
Will it last? Probably not? Will a bunch of people spend a bunch of money and have some fun for a while... yes.
Will the Renegade get banned... I don't think so. It's not their fault other people decided to do this.
It's hard to say given how reactionary the anti-gun lobby has been since the Liberals have taken control of the government. I'm not a lawyer, but it feels that this would be some sort of legally questionable modification that would fall on the owner/modifier rather than the manufacturer. It's certainly not an easy modification to do, given that you need industrial tools to do it. But it's hard to predict how the anti-gun lobby would react to this.Yeah Iām super skeptical. It goes against the FRT. Iām concerned this will kill the renegade.
Iām good with getting mad at Libs. But our own gun makers? Not ready for that level of #### behaviour in this current market.
Interesting thoughts. Could it be sabotage? LOLIt's hard to say given how reactionary the anti-gun lobby has been since the Liberals have taken control of the government. I'm not a lawyer, but it feels that this would be some sort of legally questionable modification that would fall on the owner/modifier rather than the manufacturer. It's certainly not an easy modification to do, given that you need industrial tools to do it. But it's hard to predict how the anti-gun lobby would react to this.
But I think the more stranger thing is that it's especially suspicious to offer this when Lockhart literally just announced their own AR style straight pull less than a week ago. The MRA Renegade/Maverick are their only competition in Canada with that type of setup, so the fact they're offering this service now? When they could have done so easily before? Knowing how the current government behaves around these type of things?
Makes me narrow my eyes a bit, I'll say that for sure.
My personal opinion is that this is, at a minimum, a very poorly thought out decision and service. Even if their intent isn't malicious, I just think it's a bad look to be advertising how your company can basically alter your competition's products to no longer be in alignment with their legally described form. Even if we assume that they aren't behaving in bad faith, it seems reasonable to me that if anyone does take issue with the Renegade becoming a semi-auto, they would more likely direct their ire at the manufacturer rather than the company modifying the firearms. The fact that Lockhart has actual financial incentive for all these things to occur is just another reason why this type of service feels just slightly scummy.Interesting thoughts. Could it be sabotage? LOL
Easily convertible to what? Semi auto as an action type has not been made illegalā¦so converting a rifle of one legal action type to another legal action type is illegal exactly how?Lockhart Tactical made an Instagram post about offering services to make these semiauto, *legally* they claim, which kind of takes away the point of the Renegade in our current world and market; ruining it for everyone once it's deemed "easily convertible".
Thank you for pointing this out to us. We are aware that Lockhart Tactical has been advertising that they can use the MRA Renegade as a basis to machine and manufacture a brand-new firearm through specialized processes, while claiming this results in a semi-auto rifle that is ācompletely legalā under the RCMP. These statements are not accurate.Lockhart Tactical made an Instagram post about offering services to make these semiauto, *legally* they claim, which kind of takes away the point of the Renegade in our current world and market; ruining it for everyone once it's deemed "easily convertible".
Thank you for pointing this out to us. We are aware that Lockhart Tactical has been advertising that they can use the MRA Renegade as a basis to machine and manufacture a brand-new firearm through specialized processes, while claiming this results in a semi-auto rifle that is ācompletely legalā under the RCMP. These statements are not accurate.Do you folks offer machining instead of going through Lockhart?
We have a couple available right now, and more are on the way.Any more receiver kits coming in stock if so, when? Thanks
Our opinion is that this is not just a modification, but legally is considered manufacturing a new firearm. It doesn't matter if the starting position is already a firearm; what is being offered is something sufficiently different, requiring specialist tools and knowledge to qualify as manufacturing a new firearm (without a FRT). The fact that the Renegade can accept magazines that hold more than 5 rounds (Per bill C21) would make any semi-auto version/conversion a prohibited firearm.My personal opinion is that this is, at a minimum, a very poorly thought out decision and service. Even if their intent isn't malicious, I just think it's a bad look to be advertising how your company can basically alter your competition's products to no longer be in alignment with their legally described form. Even if we assume that they aren't behaving in bad faith, it seems reasonable to me that if anyone does take issue with the Renegade becoming a semi-auto, they would more likely direct their ire at the manufacturer rather than the company modifying the firearms. The fact that Lockhart has actual financial incentive for all these things to occur is just another reason why this type of service feels just slightly scummy.
But of course, that's my opinion and point of view. It might just be that Lockhart really thinks that this is some sort of legal loophole that only functions because of how the Maverick/Renegade are designed, which just doesn't work due to how the Conspiracy straight pull is designed.
But it certainly is a contrived timing for them to offer this service.
Yeah I don't think it's going to work out for them. I have a feeling they're going to scrap this idea shortly.The thing about LHT is that they've extensively oversold back orders for their rifles, which typically took months to receive. And now they posted a machining service that's already sold out and requires a wait list. Something doesn't smell right to me.