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When Edenpine folded in 1994, the totality of the rights passed to Bushmaster, who manufactured it as the "Bushmaster M17S", starting just a few months before the approval of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban. The M17S was the only American-made bullpup rifle to be offered commercially, and the only one not banned by name.
The Bushmaster Arm Pistol was a 5.56×45mm NATO firearm, categorizeable as either a long pistol (under the American legal definition of a pistol) or compact carbine rifle, produced by the Gwinn Firearms Company, and later Bushmaster Firearms Inc.
Bushmaster bullpup may refer to: Bushmaster M17S, a bullpup rifle; Bushmaster Arm Pistol, a bullpup pistol This page was last edited on 12 ...
Bushmaster Arm Pistol: Gwinn Firearms 5.56×45mm United States 1977 Bushmaster M17S: Bushmaster Firearms International: 5.56×45mm NATO Australia 1992 Crye Six12 Crye Precision 12 gauge United States 2014 Cook automatic rifle Benicia Armory .30-06 Springfield United States 1950s Desert Tech MDR: Desert Tech.223 Remington 5.56×45mm NATO.223 Wylde
The Bushmaster M17S was a semi-automatic bullpup rifle that was manufactured by Bushmaster from 1992 until 2005. The BAR-10 was meant to compete in the .308 market against ArmaLite 's AR-10 series rifles and Springfield Armory 's M1A Rifle by offering a .308 rifle that could accept the relatively inexpensive metric and inch pattern FN FAL ...
Bushmaster Arm Pistol, a 5.56×45mm NATO weapon classified as either a long pistol or short rifle; Bushmaster M17S, a semi-automatic bullpup rifle; Bushmaster ACR, an assault rifle originally designed by Magpul; Bushmaster XM-15, a line of AR-15 pattern rifles and carbines; Bushmaster M4-type Carbine, a carbine in the XM-15 family
Kevork Djansezian/Getty ImagesA Smith & Wesson .357 magnum revolver is displayed for customers to rent at the Los Angeles Gun Club. Video correction: Apple's stock price dropped below $400 a share ...
A bullpup firearm is one with its firing grip located in front of the breech of the weapon, instead of behind it. [1] This creates a weapon with a shorter overall length for a given barrel length, and one that is often lighter, more compact, concealable, and more maneuverable than a conventionally configured firearm.