aval Posted January 13, 2013 Report Share Posted January 13, 2013 I was wonder if anyone has ran into this or if it is even a problem. While eyeballing some toys at a gun store I was looking at a used pistol AR-15 upper, the clerk had told me that the guy traded it in and bought a ACR or SCAR( forgot already) to replace the AR as his vehicle pistol. I told him it would be a SBR and he said it would be considered a pistol due to the length of the barrel. So which is it, because if it is considerd a pistol I'll be buying one. <dontknow> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robocop1051 Posted January 14, 2013 Report Share Posted January 14, 2013 Your LGS is partially right. The barrel length doesn't make it a pistol. The lack of a stock does. A buffer tube is not considered a stock. It serves a function completely seperate and unrelated to the job of a stock. A pistol buffer tube is generally shorter and fatter than a standard tube. This is to prevent a stock from being placed on it. I believe Feds say you can't have a forward vertical grip attached. The Magpul AFG is a grey area accessory. Just putting a short barrel upper on your AR is a big no-no. The AR lower receiver must be registered as a pistol. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aval Posted January 14, 2013 Author Report Share Posted January 14, 2013 I meant the ACR or SCAR as a pistol/SBR. I have a AR pistol myself thats why I was looking at the pistol upper they had displayed. I was just confused on him saying the SCAR/ACR was a pistol when I thought it would be considered a SBR due to it only having a 16" barrel and its overall lenght when folded is shorter then what the law says? And here in Michigan I didn't think we were allowed to own SBR. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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