"Real men have always needed to know what time it is so they are at the airfield on time, pumping rounds into savages at the right time, etc. Being able to see such in the dark while light weights were comfy in bed without using a light required luminous material." -Originally Posted by ramairthree
GWN- Great White North... Canada. I saw guns like that up there in the mid 80's. Back then, Canada had very liberal gun laws. Now the only thing very liberal up there is the government...
There's almost no chance it's a transferable.
Someone at your department should know where it came from. Maybe a retiree knows. There should be some kind of paperwork on it.
"Real men have always needed to know what time it is so they are at the airfield on time, pumping rounds into savages at the right time, etc. Being able to see such in the dark while light weights were comfy in bed without using a light required luminous material." -Originally Posted by ramairthree
Buy it from your dept! Even without the lower, if you have to.
You should definitely look into whether it’s possibly transferable (unlikely because it’s a AI manufacture) or a pre-86 dealer sample.
File a FOIA request with ATF for the registration and transfer history.
Last edited by JoshNC; 04-26-18 at 21:42.
SLG Defense 07/02 FFL/SOT
"Real men have always needed to know what time it is so they are at the airfield on time, pumping rounds into savages at the right time, etc. Being able to see such in the dark while light weights were comfy in bed without using a light required luminous material." -Originally Posted by ramairthree
The Brownells charging handle (or Genesco Armalite) will not fit and a replacement handle is unobtanium. Every now and then a collector will make a few reproduction replacement handles but it is going to be another couple of years for it to happen again. The charging handle and the bolt are the most common points of failure on the early AR10s (1957-1960). The later Portuguese contract model (1961) wore out gracefully, and there were no common points of failure because of the wider bolt lugs and radically improved charging handle. The one piece charging handle in the Cuban and Sudanese was somewhat delicate. The Guatemalan and Transitional AR10s had a slightly reinforced one-piece charging handle which was not as prone to breakage.
The rifle in the OP is a Sudanese variant and is almost certainly from Canada, since it looks "converted" to their specs. Some of these sneaked by and others were allowed to be imported by sleepy border agents. These are generally taken by atf and later the owner is allowed to keep the upper and possible other parts. A pre-may sample like this one would be worth $8-12K (if shootable) and a Transferable would be worth at least $30K since it would have C&R status. Otherwise its just parts.
Unshootable machine guns sell at quite a discount even from wholesale. I found a pre-may sample AR10 that was missing the selector switch and it was obtained by a friend after a $2K discount. My first C&R MG was an AR10 missing the entire bolt carrier group and was bought at a huge discount.
A class 3 ffl holder with good relations with atf can find out the status of the gun. They have to do it all the time before taking department trades. A LLEO or civilian will get nowhere with atf.
To change the subject. My latest acquisition is a Cuban model AR10 made in 1957. It is intact and came with the original leather sling. However, the sling is tucked away somewhere so that it does not degrade in the dryness of the gun safe.
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