You're awfully defensive of their price structure - you linked to them in some way are you?
My point, that you are either clearly missing, or being willfully dismissive of, is this:
If one considers the costs of $1700 for a receiver set or $2050 for a complete rifle (before tax),
subtracting the receiver set from a completed base model rifle, the rest of the components including the barrel would appear by most reasonable counts to be more than $350 retail.
It stands to reason then that Lockhart recognizes there are a lot of people out there with complete ARs and are looking to cash in on that misfortune by selling overly inflated priced receivers.
People are fooling themselves if they think these won't get swept up further down the road in more bans through 'ever-greening'.
They'd be better off to keep their ARs as is, and donate the cash that they'd otherwise use to pad Lockhart's wallet to fight the LIEbrals.
And no, it cannot be summarized by "This is firearm pricing in Canada now".
Yes we are agreeing it’s a better deal/price point for entire rifle. What they are doing is called up selling/suggestive selling. Every business does it, so I don’t understand why firearm companies have to cater to firearm owners. You want to save money, buy the full rifle, take off the parts you don’t need, and sell the extra parts.
If people weren’t buying them they would have to lower prices, but it looks like TNA sold out of 60 builder kits in a day or two, G4C sold out of 50 rifles in a day. So the demand is there and it’s a free market. The solution, don’t buy if you think it’s inflated.