Posted October 30, 2015 9:28 pm by Comments

By Jeremy S

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CZ’s Scorpion Evo 3 S1 is 100% made in the Czech Republic. This is fine for a pistol but, in the U.S., poses importation problems were it a rifle and prohibits those wanting to turn the pistol into a rifle (including into a registered SBR) from doing so legally. We have the perfectly understandable, totally commonsense 18 U.S.C. § 922(r) of the 1968 Gun Control Act to thank for this, and what it all means was previously broken down in this post. What it meant to CZ-USA was that providing the Czech-made, factory folding stock to U.S. customers first required replacing at least six of the Scorp’s 15, 922(r)-relevant parts with U.S.-made alternatives. . .

As a refresher, 922(r) states that an imported, semi-automatic rifle can have no more than 10 foreign-made parts from a list of 20 specific parts. CZ’s Scorpion in pistol form has 15 of these parts, but adding the Czech stock bumps it up to 16 while also turning it into a rifle that’s now subject to 922(r) compliance.

Click to enlarge

Therefore, CZ-USA’s compliance kit replaces the muzzle attachment, trigger, disconnector, pistol grip, magazine follower, and magazine floorplate with U.S.-made versions.

<img src="http://truthaboutguns-zippykid.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/20151030_160649-900×494.jpg" alt="20151030_160649" width="600" …Read the Rest

Source:: Truth About Guns

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