Tag Archives: glock carbine

AMG brings Lock, Stock and Barrel system for G17

A new player in the Glock pistol-to-carbine conversion game, American Manufacturing Group, has a system for the 4 Gen Glock 17 that swaps out the barrel of the handgun with a rifle-length drop in and adds a M4 style stock– while remaining ATF compliant.

Why a carbine kit?

Pistol caliber carbines date back to the 1850s and the concept in and among themselves are not new. Taking a standard handgun action and adding a short, rifle length (16-20 inch) barrel and a buttstock, you now have a longarm that still fires a pistol round. The stock and forearm provide a much better and more stable platform than a pistol’s grip alone. With a longer barrel, you get a longer and much more accurate sight radius. This means that basketball sized groups at 25-yards with a handgun can very easily become softball sized groups with that same handgun in a carbine configuration. With a little practice and a steady shooting position, 100-yard shots are a real possibility. You just can’t do that with a standard handgun.

AMG Sporting

Vincent Chiarenza’s American Manufactures Group has been around since about 2001 and markets a lot of different firearms accessories including a neat little 22LR reloader. One of their newest products is the Lock, Stock and Barrel system for the G17.

Guns-Circle-PNG-518x321

Simple in concept, it replaces the standard barrel on your Glock 17 (4th Gen only at this time), with a rifle-length 16-incher, a new Guide Rod Assembly with Accelerator and Accelerator cuff, and a Phoenix stock system that is currently considered kosher by the ATF’s Technical Branch– which means its NFA-compliant.

According to AMG, the system can be swapped out in two minutes and the changes are not permanent and is billed as improving accuracy “up to 70 percent.”

On the downside, you have to use 124-grain 9mm or higher to acutate the slide.

MSRP is $299.

More in my column at Glock Forum

Mech Tech Glock Carbine

Glocks are some of the most efficient and versatile handguns of all time. Now they don’t make a rifle (yet) but a number of companies do offer conversion kits to allow you to convert your Glock handgun into a pistol caliber carbine. One of the most popular ones is the CCU made by Mech-Tech.

Pistol caliber carbines date back to the 1850s and the concept in and among themselves are not new. Taking a standard handgun action and adding a short, rifle length (16-20 inch) barrel and a buttstock, you now have a longarm that still fires a pistol round. The stock and forearm provide a much better and more stable platform than a pistol’s grip alone. With a longer barrel, you get a longer and much more accurate sight radius. This means that basketball sized groups at 25-yards with a handgun can very easily become softball sized groups with that same handgun in a carbine configuration. With a little practice and a steady shooting position, 100-yard shots are a real possibility. You just can’t do that with a standard handgun.

Read the rest in my column at the Glock Forums

Technically this is still a pistol

Custom options for your Sub2000

Oleg Volk, has another informative post on CTD about customising your Sub2000 pistol carbine
Customized Sub2000

Customized Sub2000 with soon to be released Viridian X5L RS light/laser.

The first three parts come from Tacticool Products: a recoil buffer, a stock tube cover to insulate the shooter’s cheek from the metal, and a charging handle cover to reduce the pressure on the fingers when chambering a round. These add little weight and cost almost nothing, while greatly increasing the use comfort.

The other parts come from Red Lion Precision. This small group of firearm enthusiasts make high quality accessories that transform Sub2000 from a neat utility carbine into a robust fighting tool. The metal front sight replacing the original plastic part has U-shaped protective ears instead of the ring hood, much improving the sight picture. The vertical post sight is adjustable for elevation with the standard M16 tool. The compensator protects the muzzle crown while reducing already slight muzzle climb to nothing. Sharp teeth on the front of the compensator give more substance to muzzle strikes in CQB. The small rail under the front sights is for mounting lights in a position where their output isn’t partially occluded by the barrel. Most importantly, the ventilated railed forend is rock-solid and can be rotated in 90-degree increments without losing the zero on attached sights. That allows folding of the gun with optics and other top rail accessories still attached. Two Magpul parts go on that rail, the RSA sling eyelet to hold the sling and the AFG for comfortable support and recoil control. The rest can be read  here