If you had a transferrable (pre-86) Class III lower, you could either attach a dedicated .22 upper, or else drop a conversion kit into the standard 5.56/.223 upper.
For a pre-922R semiauto model in the US, you'd be looking at around $2000 - $3000. For an NFA tax stamped full auto, at least $18,000. Some companies are making semiauto "Frankengun" clones from decommissioned military weapons, and those generally run in the $800 - $1000 range.
For a pre-922R semiauto model in the US, you'd be looking at around $2000 - $3000. For an NFA tax stamped full auto, at least $18,000. Some companies are making semiauto "Frankengun" clones from decommissioned military weapons, and those generally run in the $800 - $1000 range.
The semi-auto and full auto AK-47s have different designs. Not only does the full auto have different parts, but those parts cannot fit in the semi-auto only version of the AK-47. It is against US law to have a semi-auto that can be "readily converted" to full auto.
Depends on the laws where YOU are. In MOST of the US, the semiauto version of the AK47 is perfectly legal. The full auto version is also legal IF it has been registered with the Federal BATFE, and the the transfer tax paid on it.
The CP99 is designed to shoot semi auto. There is a guy on you-tube who converted one to shoot full auto and he shows how he converted it. But once this has been done it can not be reversed. I believe over time the gun will wear out if it is converted. Personally I like the way it was designed originally.
It is capable of semi-auto or 3 round burst mode. However the M4A1 and Diemaco (now Colt Canada) C8 do have a full auto fire mode, rather than the three round burst.
The differences will usually be in the sear and trigger group, and often in the dimensions for the space milled out for the trigger group to fit into. This prevents a firearm from being converted to full auto by simply dropping in full auto parts. Additionally, a full auto firearm will typically be strengthened and reinforced more than a semi auto will.
Full Auto happened in 2006.
With the selector switch set to semiauto, the rifle fires one shot per pull of the trigger. This is in contrast to "burst" mode, where the rifle fires several shots per pull (usually 3) or "Full Auto", where the rifle fires until trigger is released.
I have the same gun and i use it on full auto all of the time. So yes it has full auto.
Full Auto was created on 2006-02-10.
Do you mean the M249? Yes, that one is full auto.