![]() You start by removing the charging handle. The plastic grip and lower receiver cover plastic felt well made.Īlthough the owner’s manual has eight pictures on the magazine loader and three pages of pictures and instructions on loading, there were no images to illustrate the disassembly process. I couldn’t see any burs or overly rough edges from machining. The bolt handle was so loose I worried about it falling out when shooting. The charging handle was easy to remove from the bolt. ![]() The question no one asked: what’s it for? All guns should have a purpose: defense, hunting, competition, punching tiny groups in paper or causal plinking. “Is it a Class 3 weapon? How much does it cost? Does it take original parts? Are you going to SBR it? Is it a pistol or a rifle?” Gun store customers and the sales staff peppered me with questions. When I took the GSG out of the wood crate I could feel the eyes on me. The case contained one 25-round magazine, a mag loader, lock, owner’s manual, tools, four front sights and a sticker. ![]() It looks like the WW2 original but functions differently. I opened the case and there she was: a German Sport Guns GSG-MP40P Pistol in 9mm. ” An Amish-made crate with a semi-automatic version of a German machine gun inside. On the crate’s side a metal plate read “American Tactical Imports, Rochester, NY Amish Hand-Crafted Case. It was stamped American Tactical MP40 with what looked like a Nazi eagle above it.
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