-You can shoot them on indoor ranges where rifle calibers aren't allowed or heavily restricted
(Innocent bystanders should check their own range's rules
very carefully:
My club's indoor range of course allows 9mm ammo,
but the
only longarms allowed are .22LR).
What else do you arm your kids under age 5 with when TEOTWAWKI happens?
I can't find the video I saw this week of an operating operator little girl
shooting a pistol with three rapid mag dumps while standing free.
So I'll have to post this instead.
one says - adjustable, other says - fixed. is it the same damn picture there?
ok, i think i get it - they ran a pin into it. is it removable or welded in permanently?
Dunno, but unless someone answers authoritatively here,
you need to either find a
detailed review/Q&A on some other site,
or fondle it yourself in real life.
Because look at the
Massified Ruger AR-15:
The stock is fixed.
Despite casual appearances,
the adjuster is not some spring-loaded dingus
that lifts a pin out of an array of holes in the rectangular ridge
on the bottom of the receiver extension tube.
The Massified AR's rectangular bottom ridge has no slot, and no extra holes.
There is no spring, the lever is there for show, and that's not a pin -
it's a machine screw that screws into
something threaded (the ridge?),
and holds the butt at one fixed place.
El no adjusto, el no collapso.
At casual glance you wouldn't know that.
Move out of Mass and it's not gonna break the bank
to entirely replace the extension/stock with some Magpul furniture.
But there is no roll pin to drill out,
and you're
not gonna just replace the machine screw with a sprung pin -
there are no holes for a pin to latch in to.
Somewhere there's probably a maniac with a milling machine
that has converted their stock to adjustable, just because.
But it's not trivial.
Not impugning the Ruger PCC you're looking at.
Just saying that Ruger
may have done some engineering design
to make the stock
look adjustable at first glance,
even though somehow it's completely neutered.