Nothing other than you can't cut your own barrel shorter than 18.5", short barrels have to be manufactured.
do you create a serial ?
at what point in the build do you have to register it?
You must submit pictures of left and right sides including the serial number. You also have to submit a picture of the internals looking from the top down so they can see you haven't made room to put the fun switch.
You have 30 days after the receiver is capable of firing a round to register it. You must submit pictures of left and right sides including the serial number. You also have to submit a picture of the internals looking from the top down so they can see you haven't made room to put the fun switch. The serial number must be a certain depth (I believe .010 thou). If it is a direct copy of a commercially availlable ar15 (say LMT) it should be approved in about a week or 2. They will then issue an frt and the verifiers no. and you register it on line. If it's something you have designed yourself or some unusual design it could take up to a year to be approved and you may have to send the actual receiver in to the lab for inspection. When I made my AR10 receiver it took 3 months to approve because no one in Canada had made one before. My AR 15 receiver took 1 week.
Nothing other than you can't cut your own barrel shorter than 18.5", short barrels have to be manufactured.
Where you getting that info from? Link?
Definition of a Prohibited Firearm
The Criminal Code states that a prohibited firearm is:
a handgun with a barrel length of 105 mm or less;
a handgun designed or adapted to discharge 25 or 32 calibre ammunition;
a rifle or shotgun that has been altered to make it less than 660 mm (26 inches) in overall length;
a rifle or shotgun that has been altered to make the barrel length less than 457 mm (18 inches) where the overall firearm length is 660 mm (26 inches) or more;
an automatic firearm and a converted automatic firearm;
any firearm prescribed as prohibited.
just thinkin outside the box for a moment here; if you have the ability to make receivers/ whole firearms from scratch why not put something together non-restricted. there's lots of awsome black rifle designs that you can carry outside the range...
not to hack on building an AR for ones self, still pretty cool.
just thinkin outside the box for a moment here; if you have the ability to make receivers/ whole firearms from scratch why not put something together non-restricted. there's lots of awsome black rifle designs that you can carry outside the range...
not to hack on building an AR for ones self, still pretty cool.



























