Canadian Manufactured 7.62 x 51 Semi Auto

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I'd be willing to make serious allowances for finish if you could keep it under $600 and of course I'd not mind one bit if many of the parts were manufactured elsewhere, as long as it was assembled and serviced here.

I'd want all the originality to be concentrated on production efficiency instead of any whiz-bang gizmos.

I'm joe six-pack, and I want a rifle that directly competes with the norc m-14 and cz 858 rather than a competitor with swiss arms. An AR-10 clone sounds lovely, if non-res.

I'm also ok with the use of zinc-aluminum alloys, and/or polymer in major parts groups. Whatever cost savings are required to get me, joe-sixpack, an honest-to-god black rifle, at a price I can actually pay, you do. .

+1

Jesus if he can pull it off for sub 1k I think he would have a hit of a gun. However what about specialized parts cost (like barrels and internals), as well as Licensing your company to produce Firearms, both add a great deal of expenses.
 
Cost Breakdown:

Upper and Lower: $150 (based on ar15 costs)
Use existing ar15 furniture, made in wherever: $100
barrel: $90

That is the easy bit, now the tough bit:

That leaves the internals, the gas block/sight and small bits/sights. Did I miss anything?

The only thing I would make in Canada would be parts that could be made on a CNC machine. Farm out everything else, unless you already have the tooling (looks like you may), EDM, etc for small parts, rifling and turning machines for barrels.

Alternately, use an injection molded lower, upgraded to allow for the new material. But, the design and tooling cost will drive up the price unless the volume is very large. There in lies the benefit of CNC.
 
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I only base my AFAIK on the fact that there is no SA Original AR-10 in the FRT, only FA and CA.

Maybe yours friends' is not registered.

How about one of these AR-10's:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPrJVD2xc1A

actually there is an non FA/CA AR10 that was documented it was a Dutch built model with very few manufactured that resides in Calgary, There was a well know court case back in the 90's regarding this rifle AFIK it is still in the owners possession
 
Get a license off LWRC or Magpul and buy the TDP off them. Don't revinvent the wheel and try to design a new system from the ground up.


4140 barrel - BLAH. Source the barrel blank off Colt Canada - Hammer forge it and do it right.
 
actually there is an non FA/CA AR10 that was documented it was a Dutch built model with very few manufactured that resides in Calgary, There was a well know court case back in the 90's regarding this rifle AFIK it is still in the owners possession
Odd that there is no FRT for it:

f092za.jpg
 
Get a license off LWRC or Magpul and buy the TDP off them. Don't reinvent the wheel and try to design a new system from the ground up.
It may actually be worth a call to them to explain the situation. The main hiccup maybe the export subjects.


4140 barrel - BLAH. Source the barrel blank off Colt Canada - Hammer forge it and do it right.
They may just have the extra time availble on their GFM machine. I don't know what the tooling costs for those machines, but you could ask them. Do they run 7.62 now? My guess is they are running barrels for the US market and are swamped. FWIW we could have barrels run at one of several plants in E. Europe with GFM machines at a reasonable price, or just use button.

I love these brainstorming sessions.
 
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+1, manufacture something under licence.

Might be a good business model to approach an american company that wants to sell their products worldwide but can not export. You can help them meet their market, and help us create a new market.

Of course you'll have to start making 7.65 NATO ammo as well.



Get a license off LWRC or Magpul and buy the TDP off them. Don't revinvent the wheel and try to design a new system from the ground up.


4140 barrel - BLAH. Source the barrel blank off Colt Canada - Hammer forge it and do it right.
 
My guess is it will be extremely difficult to secure a license from a US company. Any man. will want controls over their products. Most of the guns of interest are fairly new designs. You may be able to swing them with an international marketing pitch and a royalty on each unit sold.
 
I'll believe it when I see it. :(

That being said, the specs sound good except for that FN Fal para stock. That stock looks like crap.

Also a side charging handle would be nice. One on the left side for a change not the right. Or something that can be switched to either side. The charging handle on the AR isn't bad except it's awkward with a scope.

It'll be interesting to see if anything comes from this.
 
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First, 5.56mm is not in the cards. 7.62x51 and perhaps a 7.62x33 (based on the 7.92x33 Kurz).

Next, barrel would not be 4140, just the receiver and perhaps even tougher material depending on machining parameters.

Stock could also be Galil style folder but it depends on manufacturer.

I am not re-inventing the wheel. All that is required is blending the best of many different designs and adding some of my own ideas. The process is receiver centric as most of the other parts are already available on a third party production basis. CNC and CAD design brings development and manufacturing down.

The barrels I am talking about are hammer forged, nitride treated (not chrome lined crap) and fluted, just like snipers use. Gas system is adjustable.

There is no consideration of an AR style rifle. That one has been beaten to death and while a decent firearm, its time has come and gone.

An LWRC .308 in Canada is very unlikely. DOS in the US will soon require a DSP-83 (End Use Certificate) for any military calibre imported into Canada if allowed at all.

Lastly, the end result should be non-restricted. As for US production, we own two US factories that could produce it as well.

Hope this helps.

Severus
 
Here are a couple of questions: Are Canadian arms manufacturers allowed to export with fewer restrictions than American? And what kind of market do you think Canada has for a non-restricted semi-auto, 1000, 5000, 10,000?

Internationally Canada is known as a high-quality manufacturing country, probably on par with Switzerland or Germany. I feel that the key to success is to produce a superior quality product and then to sell it to the foreign market in order to achieve better economies of scale.
 
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