QUOTE (KarmaInferno @ Oct 21 2011, 04:07 PM)

Those AKs were actually BB guns, but could easily be converted to full on bullet-firing AKs with a few part swaps.
Oh, yeah. Receiver, barrel, trigger, you'd also have to put the real internals in... What the hell were you smoking?! First off, those things were copied from Japanese models that have different dimensions than real-steel, that's one, different internal structure that disallows "a few part swaps", that's two, and are made of plastic, and that one's not relevant. Then, what Shadowrun should have taught you a long time ago, you don't believe the media as they're usually lying or talking out of their asses, or lying out of their asses to drum up the moral panic. And finally, do your legwork first. A little research and you wouldn't end up ridiculed by people who actually handled that stuff. ME.
QUOTE (KarmaInferno @ Oct 21 2011, 04:07 PM)

At least it's not like the US ATF when they seized shipment of Airsoft M-4s, claiming they could be converted to a real gun. Turns out that, yes, you technically could, but only by replacing 90% of the gun except the plastic shell holding everything together, and even then it would likely shake itself apart after a few shots.
Oh, and that one was about something completely different too. Actually, the ATF threw a shit-fit over the fact that you could fit real-steel trigger mechanism to the cast zinc-alloy lower receiver of the toy (the only part of the real rifle that has a serial number stamped on it) with a liberal application of power drill, and then put it on a real-steel upper receiver to get an unregistered, untraceable rifle that could even fire once or twice before the lower receiver falls apart. If only Colt and other AR15 manufacturers weren't retarded and actually stamped the serial number on the upper receiver instead (or upper AND lower, twice), the whole brouhaha wouldn't have taken place.