DaveMachine
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
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Really? I thought the x25 would be too long. Either way, given the choice (assuming the same reliability) I'd prefer a mag conversion.
You are right the barrel isn't prohibited the firearm is
LESS THAN 18″/457mm BARREL LENGTH RULES:
CC s. 84(1) “prohibited firearm” (d): If the barrel has been SHORTENED to less than 18″/457mm, after leaving the factory, “by sawing, cutting or ANY other alteration or modification” that forces the firearm into the “prohibited firearm” class.
Look at all the keeners in the thread FFS. Probably the same kind of guys that rushed out and pinned their 10+ round 10/22 mags.
The rifle is very cool, I'd love something like it.
If I purchase a 16" AR barrel it is not illegal to cut it down to whatever length I prefer. Note that I have no reason to do so considering that it is much easier to just purchase the desired length.
A barrel is not a regulated object until it is attached to a firearm.
If the original barrel extension have to be removed and original chamber was cut off, it will render it back into a barrel blank. Than reamed the barrel for a new chamber for a completely different cartridge and re-installed the barrel extension would be considered as manufacturing not just shortened.
The only barrels specifically prohibited in Canada are pistol barrels less than 105mm in length. Apart from the under 105mm pistol barrel, there are no prohibited barrels.
OP - very interesting project, particularly as you chose to go with a gas operated design, rather than a blowback. I cannot help but think, though, that using corrosive surplus ammunition would require lots of cleaning. I note that you are using commercial ammunition.
is the actual barrel prohibited? or is a firearm with said barrel installed prohib?
Why did you go for gas operation rather than direct blow back like the 9mm versions/conversions?
Scott
Can you make some sort of insert for the magazine? It would get around having to source tt33 or non-existent np762 mags. Iirc, a company in the US did this for 9mm to feed in regular are mags.
If the original barrel extension have to be removed and original chamber was cut off, it will render it back into a barrel blank. Than reamed the barrel for a new chamber for a completely different cartridge and re-installed the barrel extension would be considered as manufacturing not just shortened.
The actual barrel is prohibited. That's how you can take a gun out of prohibited class by replacing the barrel.
As a side note this creates an interesting issue where the barrel is measured to the bolt face when it's installed but when it's removed it's measured on its own according to the lab and this results in very different outcomes.
None of this is relevant to the rifle being discussed here, though![]()
so ownership of the barrel itself is prohibited? i understand that a firearm + short barrel = prohibited, but is the short barrel itself prohib (if so do you have a reference by any chance)
jg
Canadian Criminal Code said:"prohibited device"
"prohibited device" means
(a) any component or part of a weapon, or any accessory for use with a weapon, that is prescribed to be a prohibited device,
(b) a handgun barrel that is equal to or less than 105 mm in length, but does not include any such handgun barrel that is prescribed, where the handgun barrel is for use in international sporting competitions governed by the rules of the International Shooting Union,
(c) a device or contrivance designed or intended to muffle or stop the sound or report of a firearm,
(d) a cartridge magazine that is prescribed to be a prohibited device, or
(e) a replica firearm;
My understanding is the barrel is prohibited, on or off of firearm. The thing I am wondering is, if a barrel is cut shorter it becomes two barrels. Is the short offcut piece prohibited by a he letter of the law?
so ownership of the barrel itself is prohibited? i understand that a firearm + short barrel = prohibited, but is the short barrel itself prohib (if so do you have a reference by any chance)
jg
The cut-off is just that - a cut-off. Make it into a pistol barrel and you are in trouble.
hbean beat me to quoting the law. Yes, it's ownership of the actual barrel that's prohibited. 12.6 and 12.7 grandfathered folks are kind of in legal limbo in the sense that they get to have the pistol and its barrel but there's no mechanism in the law to permit having a prohibited device i.e. the barrel. Not that anyone is ever likely to get in trouble for having a barrel as long as it belongs to a gun. This issue is especially obvious for pistol kits that have multiple barrels.
But, again, this only applies to pistols. This topic is about a rifle and a restricted one at that, which means it can have any length of a barrel as long as it's not a result of being _cut_ below 18".
If I purchase a 16" AR barrel it is not illegal to cut it down to whatever length I prefer. Note that I have no reason to do so considering that it is much easier to just purchase the desired length.
A barrel is not a regulated object until it is attached to a firearm.
soooo when im making my barrel for my ar, and I get a blank 24" long and im making a 10" ar barrel hows that work? its new manufactured so ok? just cant cut down an existing one?



























