Maybe this will be a bit on the identifying side, but I’ve been wanting to build my first ar-15 for like 6 years now. Once I finally had the money and was looking at the parts though, I thought:
: The primary advantages of the 5.56 cartridge is that it’s small size and light weight allow you to carry lots on your person, and pack many rounds into one magazine.
: Since you live in a place with a 10-round magazine limit and are not a soldier on the march, neither of these benefits particularly benefit us. Perhaps a caliber less hampered by the laws of man would be more suitable.
: If we are to be limited to ten bullets, they should be ten of the biggest bullets you can stuff into a magazine
: Well, the biggest round that’s both controllable and affordable, of course
: Yeah, yeah…
: One such caliber comes to mind immediately. An icon of the last century that survives, dinosaur-like into this one. Portable-ish, light enough, renowned for it’s killing power, and extant in vast surplus war staches throughout the world. The 7.62 by 39.
:Comrade bullet! That 230-grain pencil lead that has signed countless uprisings and revolutions! Millions have carried it like a companion on the path to total human liberation; now it’s your turn.
: It may not have the same velocity as the 5.56, but it’s twice the weight and has better terminal ballistics. Which is to say, a more dramatic and horrifying effect on a target.
: And the kick! We’ve fired an AR-15 before, remember? It was like a baby space gun, hardly any kick! You need something bigger, something that’ll remind you you’re alive!!
:Okay, sounds like the big bullet is for me. Aren’t AKs pretty expensive though?
: These days, there are all sort of things you can do with hybrid parts. We can build an AR15 that fires AK47 rounds and feeds from AK47 magazines.
Conceptualization-Easy (success): An AR-47, if you will.
: If we make it from parts, we’ll have to make the grip and stock ourselves. We can practice our woodworking and engraving!
: I’m pretty sure they have those things for sale too
: Nope, we must. It will be beautiful and custom, or we will not do it.
: Lasered wooden furniture, hybrid appearance, brass fittings…people are going to wonder why and how some sort of 1920s vampire hunter has made it onto a modern day range. Best wear your most stylish coat.
: A beautiful mutant for a beautiful mutant: how fitting.
So now I’m waiting to pick up my hybrid AR lower that takes AK mags, and slap it on the upper I got. Then it’s woodshop time baybee
10rd limit, most bang for the buck in the ar-15 platform? My mind goes to 6.5 grendel, then you can even stretch it out further than x39 and 5.56
I have an inherent aversion to new things
To be fair, AR lowers that take AK mags are newer than 65 grundle. Should be a fun gun either way, the magazines are the failure point for those ar-47 things. A friend of mine built one that took the 7.62x39 AR magazines for a standard AR lower and it never really goes through a full mag without a some kind of jam or feed failure. The AK magazine is a thing of beauty and if you want to get fancy you could even get bakelite mags for the flex.