Neat. I wonder if that could be considered a bullpup stock?
Neat. I wonder if that could be considered a bullpup stock?
TDS: What brainwashed people claim when someone isn’t gullible enough to fall for their cult nonsense.
this doesn't appear to be a folded stock but rather a collapsed stock.
the stock slides forwards fully covering the trigger / magazine.
that would be the reason for the silly looking rear end.
I survived the gun control scare of 2013 and all I got was this t-shirt.......
And 30 PMags, 5000 rounds of .223, 3000 rounds of 9mm, 5 BCG's, 5 stripped lowers, and a really pissed off wife.
Wing Nut
"No man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government." Thomas Jefferson.
Im glad someone called me on that, it was meant in jest, but it didn't come off very neighborly.
Emoticons don't always portray that very well.
Anyway, I like the overall design, I'm sure the grip could be improved amongst other asthetics.
Edit: I want to see one built that is spring loaded, where you hold the stock in a collapsed state, push a button and the action is pushed forward by a spring and then locks in place. I guess this has the risk of becoming a bump stock, but that's not really possible with a bolt action. The only functional aspect this meets is easier carrying, obviously its mostly aesthetic.
Last edited by cody c; 11-28-2018 at 12:54 PM.
Without the suppressor, this is only mildly interesting because it was a diWHY?
To me it looks like its just the rear of the trigger guard that is actually exposed when collapsed, not the trigger itself. Regardless, depending on the rifle, it may still meet minimum OAL even when collapsed as I would imagine most actions are roughly 6" long alone so a 20"+ barrel on it would make it 26" (just over 660mm).