Free: Contests & Raffles.
In diving into the ar world and I’ve got a pretty stupid sbr question. I was talking to my brother and them and he was saying I need to fill out a form sent it in and get a stamp on the rifle. Cool. But than he goes on to say that if I want to go out and shoot it I need to notify some one I’m going to do that before I go to the range? Is this true? Again sorry for the question but I can’t find a straight answer on it.
If you go with a 10.5" barrel or shorter it is classified as a pistol.
If you go with a 10.5" barrel or shorter it is classified as a pistol. Don't have to go through all of that then. I have a AR pistol
Quote from: Russ McDonald on June 05, 2020, 05:01:59 AMIf you go with a 10.5" barrel or shorter it is classified as a pistol. Don't have to go through all of that then. I have a AR pistolPretty sure it has to come from the manufacturer as a pistol in order for it not to be classified as a SBR. You put a short barrel or even a short barrel upper and an arm brace on an AR that was sold by the manufacture as a rifle, you better have it engraved as an SBR and have a tax stamp for it because you just made a short barreled rifle.AR pistols made and sold as pistols, regardless of barrel length and even if they have an arm brace, are considered pistols and don't require a tax stamp. The ATF has a memo on arm braces and how they can be fired from the shoulder. It's been awhile since I read it but I recall it leaves a lot of room for interpretation. If I remember it read something like you can occasionally shoot an AR pistol with an arm brace from the shoulder but if you intend to shoot it from the shoulder all the time, then not so much. Like I said, it's worded kind of odd and leaves it open to interpretation with a lot of grey area.
Quote from: b23 on June 05, 2020, 12:32:45 PMQuote from: Russ McDonald on June 05, 2020, 05:01:59 AMIf you go with a 10.5" barrel or shorter it is classified as a pistol. Don't have to go through all of that then. I have a AR pistolPretty sure it has to come from the manufacturer as a pistol in order for it not to be classified as a SBR. You put a short barrel or even a short barrel upper and an arm brace on an AR that was sold by the manufacture as a rifle, you better have it engraved as an SBR and have a tax stamp for it because you just made a short barreled rifle.AR pistols made and sold as pistols, regardless of barrel length and even if they have an arm brace, are considered pistols and don't require a tax stamp. The ATF has a memo on arm braces and how they can be fired from the shoulder. It's been awhile since I read it but I recall it leaves a lot of room for interpretation. If I remember it read something like you can occasionally shoot an AR pistol with an arm brace from the shoulder but if you intend to shoot it from the shoulder all the time, then not so much. Like I said, it's worded kind of odd and leaves it open to interpretation with a lot of grey area.Most stripped lowers come as "other".Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk