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Posted

Got "the call" yesterday from Guns and Leather. My AAC 762-SDN-6 arrived.

Got by there today to pickup MY paperwork...just so happened to have my SBR with it's 300 Blackout upper on it in the truck...you know...zombie protection. After some slight begging Dennis let me take it downstairs to try out "just a few" rounds.

I was able to shoot a 9in AR indoors...shooting a 7.62 subsonic round with no hearing protection on at all :D

sdn6.jpg

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Posted

Sweet set-up! Did you go with the AAC upper or another brand?

The 300 BLK has my intrest, but I have another SBR project I have to finish first.

Posted
Sweet set-up! Did you go with the AAC upper or another brand?

The 300 BLK has my intrest, but I have another SBR project I have to finish first.

Says Advanced Armament Corp on the receiver so I'm going to assume its the AAC upper.

Very nice sir. I really want to build a similar setup.

Posted

It is the AAC upper. Ran into a couple of FTEs but its most likely due to it being dirty and dry.

Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk

  • 1 month later...
Posted

WOW :-) Keep us updated on how it does. That is similar to my next planned build (9-11.5" barrel, 300BLKOUT, 762-SND-6, EOTECH) i just haven't picked an upper I like! Nice SBR!

Guest WyattEarp
Posted

is this for full auto? or just semi-auto, but it's NFA because of the SBR?

Guest WyattEarp
Posted

ah i gotcha. this is still new stuff to me, so trying to learn it and keep it all straight. ;)

Posted

There is a lot to learn and some of it can be confusing.

For instance, if you have a stamp for a registered machine gun (full auto), you do not need a second stamp if you want to SBR it. Machine guns can be any length.

Posted (edited)

things to think about:

if the barrel is less than 16" then it is considered a SBR which is a $200 tax stamp (you pay per gun specifically per lower receiver). The way around this is to get rid of the stock and you now have an ar pistol. Or you can permanently weld a flash hider or muzzle break to make the overall length (OAL) over 16" (my own ar is a 14.5" with a battle comp making the OAL 16.1") Just make sure you pick a lower you like because the sbr tax stamp is specifically for the lower so you can sell/trade your uppers. You can also cut the barrel off your current ar (well let a gunsmith do it :).

Then its $200 tax stamp for any surpressor (you pay per surpressor not gun). So you can have three threaded 1911s and pay nothing but $200 when you get your AAC Ti-Rant 45 (that's what i want)

Full auto is another $200 (per "machine gun" or per sear) but you have to find a gun made before a certain year (i think its 1986). These guns cost a lot and you can even register just the full auto sear (so you can put the sear in a compatible gun), but it has to be made before 1986, and those sell for $12,000 by themselves. Full Auto is pretty much out of the question for most people unless you want to serve in prison for 10 years (do it illegally), have a load of cash, become a class 3 dealer, or join spec ops or a tac team.

So in other words if it was full auto he would have had to pay 3 tax stamps.... hope this helps

Edited by alwaysonjohn
Posted

If it was a machine gun, it would only be two stamps. He wouldn't need the third stamp for sbr since machine guns aren't limited in length

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