OK,
You May ask how does the Valmet Hunter and M78 become Non-Restricted and none of the other Valmets or AKs.
One firearm, the Valmet Hunter, including the Valmet Hunter Auto and the Valmet M78, has been deleted from the class, as it has been determined that it is not essentially a paramilitary firearm and is suitable for hunting purposes.
Well, to fully understand this you need to understand that the receiver is the gun. If you take any receiver and recreate anything arround it it is still considered the initial gun. This allows gun owners to change or customize a gun. If you rework things to the 'max' you can create something new but really under the law it is the initial design.
Once upon a time the govt purchased 'Valmet Hunters in 308" for indigenous Canadians. When the initial legistlation changes happened in '95 all the Valmets & AKs were probibited. Once the above situation was reviewed - the guns that were provided were deprohibited. Remember that it is not just the gun but the receiver. So First it is the Valmet Hunter that gets deprohibited, BUT since the Valmet Hunter and the Valmet M78 have virtually the same machined receiver the M78 gets deprohibited also.
Valmet Hunter
Valmet M78
Here lies a few of the glitches. Our govt did not recognise that the two receivers are not the same. The machined Hunter receivers have a few differences:
-Trigger in a different place - another trunion has been added
-A narrower mag well (308 only)
-3 tapped screw holes in the receiver to allow the dust cover to be secured for optics
You might ask then why was the M76 not deprohibited since it also has the same receiver? And it infact is closer to the Hunter receiver than the M78 receiver. Who knows - it looks meaner and is shorter and thus more portable making more dangerous?
Valmet M76
With the above guns there is now another complication. There is no recognition of stamped vs. machined receivers!! The Hunters are all machined, the M78s are both stamped and machined, not that it matters but the M76 is also both stamped and machined.
You see that this deprohibition and reclassification was not done propery. If it was done correctly then the M76 would be deprohibited as it shares the same receiver.
Ultimatly in the End it is the receiver that matters and that is how a Valmet Hunter can end up looking like this:
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/untitled.jpg
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/000_0165.jpg
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/valmet_223_galill.jpg
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/valmet_223_galil2.jpg
You May ask how does the Valmet Hunter and M78 become Non-Restricted and none of the other Valmets or AKs.
One firearm, the Valmet Hunter, including the Valmet Hunter Auto and the Valmet M78, has been deleted from the class, as it has been determined that it is not essentially a paramilitary firearm and is suitable for hunting purposes.
Well, to fully understand this you need to understand that the receiver is the gun. If you take any receiver and recreate anything arround it it is still considered the initial gun. This allows gun owners to change or customize a gun. If you rework things to the 'max' you can create something new but really under the law it is the initial design.
Once upon a time the govt purchased 'Valmet Hunters in 308" for indigenous Canadians. When the initial legistlation changes happened in '95 all the Valmets & AKs were probibited. Once the above situation was reviewed - the guns that were provided were deprohibited. Remember that it is not just the gun but the receiver. So First it is the Valmet Hunter that gets deprohibited, BUT since the Valmet Hunter and the Valmet M78 have virtually the same machined receiver the M78 gets deprohibited also.
Valmet Hunter

Valmet M78

Here lies a few of the glitches. Our govt did not recognise that the two receivers are not the same. The machined Hunter receivers have a few differences:
-Trigger in a different place - another trunion has been added
-A narrower mag well (308 only)
-3 tapped screw holes in the receiver to allow the dust cover to be secured for optics
You might ask then why was the M76 not deprohibited since it also has the same receiver? And it infact is closer to the Hunter receiver than the M78 receiver. Who knows - it looks meaner and is shorter and thus more portable making more dangerous?
Valmet M76

With the above guns there is now another complication. There is no recognition of stamped vs. machined receivers!! The Hunters are all machined, the M78s are both stamped and machined, not that it matters but the M76 is also both stamped and machined.
You see that this deprohibition and reclassification was not done propery. If it was done correctly then the M76 would be deprohibited as it shares the same receiver.
Ultimatly in the End it is the receiver that matters and that is how a Valmet Hunter can end up looking like this:
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/untitled.jpg
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/000_0165.jpg
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/valmet_223_galill.jpg
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m79/hfp75/Valmet-Misc/valmet_223_galil2.jpg
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