Is 7N6 banned?

Is 7N6 banned?

On April 7, 2014, the ATF reclassified imported 7N6 5.45×39 ammunition as “armor piercing” and banned its importation through a special advisory memo after ATF found an extremely rare and obscure Polish-made pistol that could supposedly shoot the 7N6 cartridge. Only 200 of these pistols were ever made.

When was 7N6 banned?

On April 7, 2014, the ATF reclassified imported 7N6 5.45×39 ammunition as “armor piercing” and banned its importation through a special advisory memo after ATF found an extremely rare and obscure Polish-made pistol that could supposedly shoot the 7N6 cartridge. Only 200 of these pistols were ever made.

What is 7N6 made of?

In contrast to the original 7N6 unhardened steel rod penetrator the 7N6M rod penetrator is made of steel 65 and hardened to 60 HRC. The 7N6M 3.43 g (52.9 gr) boat-tail bullet can penetrate a 6 mm thick St3 steel plate at 300 m and 6Zh85T body armour at 80 m.

Will Russian ammo come back?

Since that’s extremely unlikely, the sanctions will likely remain indefinitely. So these sanctions won’t cut off the flow of Russian-made ammunition immediately, but it will soon be gone from US inventories, and it probably won’t return any time soon.

Is Tula ammo Russian?

Tula Cartridge Plant, also Tula Cartridge Works (TCW) (Russian: Тульский патронный завод, Tul’skiy Patronnyj Zavod) is a company based in Tula, Russia. The Tula Cartridge Plant is a manufacturer of metal products, including ammunition for the military, and various civilian products.

Is the 7N6 5.45×39 ammunition armor piercing?

Accordingly, the ammunition is “armor piercing” under the section 921 (a) (17) (B) (i) and is therefore not importable. ATF’s determination applies only to the Russian-made 7N6 ammunition analyzed, not to all 5.45×39 ammunition.

What kind of ammunition does the ATF test for?

ATF’s determination applies only to the Russian-made 7N6 ammunition analyzed, not to all 5.45×39 ammunition. Ammunition of that caliber using projectiles without a steel core would have to be independently examined to determine their importability.

Is it illegal to import armor piercing ammunition?

Since 1986, the GCA has prohibited the importation of armor piercing ammunition unless it is destined for government use or testing. The imported ammunition about which CBP was inquiring was not destined for either excepted purpose.

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