For DEER hunting, they must be "manually operated" rifles, but POSSIBLE they can be used for varmint hunting. You should check with the PA Game commission at (717) 787-4250
Yes, but centerfire semi auto rifles are not legal for HUNTING in PA.
No. PA game laws require a manually operated action- bolt, pump, lever, etc.
No, it still considered semi auto, and semi auto rifles are only allowed for pests, not deer or other large game.
Nope. PA requires a MANUALLY OPERATED centerfire rifle (their term). Pump, lever, bolt, or single shot, yes. Semi-auto, no.
Mossberg, Savage, Remington, Winchester, Marlin, .22 caliber rifles. They could be lever action, bolt action, pump, or semi auto.
Depends on your state. Some states allow hunting with semi auto rifles, and some don't.
You would have to define "kit"- but if you mean components to convert a semi auto to a full auto- No.
There is no one "Best" of any firearm- depends on what you want to do. I have some Mossberg target rifles from the 1940s that are incredibly accurate benchrest rifles- but they would make very poor hunting rifles due to the sights, the slow reloading, and the weight- almost twice what a light sporter weighs. My Winchester auto is a great little hunting rifle- light, fast, open sights- but would be a horrible rifle in a 50 meter competition.
Yes. There may be limits on the CALIBER, and PA does not permit semi-auto rifles for deer hunting, but other than that, the AR style rifle is nothing but a semiauto rifle.
18 for Title 1 rifles and shotguns, 21 for Title 1 handguns, and any Title II items (full auto weapons, short barreled rifles/shotguns, AOW, destructive devices, etc.)
If you mean in crimes in the US last year, there were 323 people killed by ALL types of rifles. There are no separate records of semi-auto rifles. If you mean legal fully automatic rifles, none. See the FBI Uniform Crime Report for accurate information. There is some VERY wrong data that is being published by others.
Bolt and semi-auto