Bullpups. Black Rain Ordnance.
This may be getting a little repetitive, but having lived in California for many years, I am very used to thinking about how to work around increasingly stupid and invasive 2nd Amendment restrictions. Also, I am back in California for another funeral (in a few hours) and I need something to take my mind off of that.
I have talked a little bit about the upcoming New Mexico restrictions, but some of the bills were so badly written that rather than present them to the committee they pulled them to change the text. Usually, that comes back even worse, but we'll see what they come up with. This time around I want to re-visit the pistol brace prohibition that ATF recently foistered on us. Given all the pending lawsuits, it is not quite a done deal, but I doubt they will find a judge to put a temporary stay on it while the court considers the rule's constitutionality. Whichever way it ends up going, around mid-May we will all have to make some decisions. As I have mentioned it elsewhere, I make it a point to be in compliance with what laws/regulations are on the books whether I agree with them or not. That is a part of being a law abiding citizen. There is a lot of us who hold this view. There are always people talking about the boogaloo and all that. It is not us. They are just stirring the crap to make themselves feel good in front of their friends online. However, if you want to know when the real fun is going to happen... well, that will be when people like me, middle-aged guys with children to protect, get really irate. We are many. We are slow to rise up. We are implacable once in motion.
But, I yet again digress...
With the restrictions on moving around with SBRs, I have no plans to register anything. That means in mid-May all pistol-brace firearms have to be taken apart. What replaces them? The first option and the one we have discussed earlier is setting up an integrally suppressed AR with a permanently mounted suppressor. I will likely set up at least one 300Blackout semi-auto that way and maybe a semi-auto 8.6 Blackout as well when I put one together. Perhaps, I can convince the guys at Q to make me a Boom Box with a permanently mounted suppressor.
What about applications where your primary goal is to have a firearm of fairly short overall length, but a suppressor is not something you hugely care about or want to pay for?
The natural solution to that is a bullpup. I keep on gong back and forth on this. I have played with a good number of bullpups over the years and they have their strengths and weaknesses. The obvious strength is that you can have a 26.1" long rifle without it being an SBR. The obvious weakness is that gun handling can get a little odd with the magazine well behind the grip. The balance can also get a little odd. Triggers are often not great given long connecting bars between the trigger itself and the location of the sear. Ambidextrous operation can be a little tricky with the complexities of bullpup ejection.
I have been looking at different bullpups on and off for a few years. A few have been on my list to pick up, but not top priority. That might be changing depending on where New Mexico regulations go.
The trigger concern has been to a significant degree alleviated. Keltec RDB has a pretty decent trigger. Tavor X95 has an available aftermarket trigger that is pretty good. DesertTech's MDR has an improved trigger that is perfectly respectable.
Kel-tec has a couple of RDB models without pistol grips which might be the thing to do in New Mexico given the laws they are trying to push through. Hopefully, Kel-tec will add a few new calibers eventually, but it takes them a while. There is also a risk of reliability issues. I really like Keltec innovation, but the CP33 experience jaded me. It works now, but....
The most proven bullpup design out there is the Israeli Tavor, since it is actually used in service by the IDF. If I were to choose one bullpup to get right now for general purpose use, I would likely get the Tavor.
MDR is a very clever design, but I do not trust anything from Desert Tech until they are at least three or four generations of design iterations into it.
On top of all that, I saw a bullpup prototype at SHOT Show that made me shelve all my bullpup acquisition plans for a bit.
Black Rain Ordnance had a few bullpup prototypes there and there were really innovative. They have developed their own version of a gas system that promises to have extremely soft recoil impulse. The rifles were fairly light and maneuverable, but mostly importantly they were balanced just right with all the accessories. Somewhat importantly, they are designed to take any normal AR grip, which means that I can use the grips that actually work for my hands, or use a finned grip if New Mexico follows California's insanity.
Now, these were prototypes, so the proof is in the pudding, so to speak. Once they make it into production we will see how they hold up. I had a long talk with the guy who designed them and I walked away thinking that this has a very fair chance of working.
The first prototypes he had were in 308 and there were normal stock and DMR versions with adjustable stock and cheekpiece. They were in the same weight range as normal hunting rifles, so even suppressed these can be true general purpose guns while maintaining decent overall length.
A long time ago, the good Col Cooper theorized that a general purpose gun should be under 40" or so for good handling. He was talking about bolt guns, but it is a pretty nice target to aim for except I want it to be under 40" suppressed. Bullpups, like the upcoming design from Black Rain, easily get me there and their initial chambering and configuration satisfies damn near all of the scout rifle requirement Col Cooper set out in terms of size, weight and capability.