Velmets being used by many Inuit in the Canadian North.
Valmet. VALMET. V-A-Lmet. Unless I've been spelling it wrong for 30 years, I'm pretty sure it's spelled with an 'A'.
Anyhow back to reason for my reply:
Hmmm. This is about the 5th time this Native/Inuit thing has been brought up on the board. The other times, CGN'ers have stated that this was the precedent as to why it (The VALMET family/series) wasn't put on the Prohib list with AK's. Is there any actual proof, or an actual source (goverment report/charter challenge, etc) to put truth to this? Or is this just conjecture, or a "my-uncles-friend-who-knows-a-guy-who-used-to-be-a-friend-to-an-RCMP/Northerner/Game Warden-told-a-guy-I-know-at-work" kinda thing?
I assume you mean the "Hunter" models? Not the M-series (62/76/78 etc)?
Not flaming you Prez, just wondering. I used to travel the North quite a bit, and don't think I ever saw a VALMET, in the hands of an Inuit hunter. Now a Norc56S in the hands of a Dogrib or Dene caribou hunter (in the "southern part" or the NW Territory before '92), yes, but never a VALMET. They've never been 'affordable' in the sense of the word. Not like a Enfield, Winchester, Savage, Ruger, or Chinese AK.
Anyhow, if anyone could shed some light on where this info came from, it'd be great.





















































