This one back in stock might really make me a buyer...
https://bravocompanyusa.com/bcm-mk2-...-12-handguard/
This one back in stock might really make me a buyer...
https://bravocompanyusa.com/bcm-mk2-...-12-handguard/
Does the above offend? If you have paid to be here, you can click here to put it in context.
https://bravocompanyusa.com/bcm-mk2-...=instocknotify
Also, that Colt Midlength upper was available all so briefly. I didn't buy either.
This isn't a like or hate on any specific brand however, I find myself becoming uninterested in companies that exist as manupackagers and don't make any of the parts they sell or use in their builds.
I like the term - manupackager.
What percentage of parts need to be made by the company to avoid the title?
Or could there be specific exemptions for components - for instance if I'm a barrel maker and offer "Lehr Specials" in which the only component made by me was the barrel, would that qual as a manupackager?
If we get too picky I think we'd find most everyone out ther (with exceptions) is a manupackager.
Coming up with a percentage is a big rabbit hole to jump down. At the very minimum a type 07 manufacturer of AR-15's should produce the serialized lower receiver in house. If you don't make that part, how can you call yourself a gun manufacturer?
Isn't most of the industry copying Colt's design? All of the companies I'd consider innovative are true manufacturers with in-house capabilities. There's a lot of marketing companies masquerading as gun / gun part manufacturers.
It’s tough to make a business case for making a part in-house that other sources can do some combination of better-cheaper-faster. Having watched my best friends former employer attempt to start selling ARs with their own receivers, there is a high probability that Mega would have clobbered them on better. Likely cheaper as well, all associated costs considered. And it took them forever to get going. Getting beat on all three is not a recipe for success. Don’t get me wrong, I love the flexibility that comes with increased vertical integration. But that’s a tough way to compete in today’s business environment. I’d rather have a gun company be expert assemblers/fitters. Designers too, if it’s something other than an AR or 1911. Outsourcing is not a dirty word.
I understand the sentiment. I am capable of acting as my own manupackager, and I don't even mark up the package when I'm done.
Well, there are legal definitions in case law. If I'm a licensed gunsmith, and you bring me a pile of parts you own to assemble, and I assemble them for you, I'm a gunsmith. If I buy a pile of parts (including a receiver), assemble them into a functional (rather than merely legal) firearm, and then sell it to you, I'm a manufacturer. According to BATFE.
I am not a lawyer under any circumstances, of course.
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Not another dime.