I
Built an AR-15 in My Kitchen
I built a semi-automatic rifle [AR] in my
kitchen. I’ll bet that’s one sentence you’d never thought you’d hear. Neither
did I, until the day I decided to do it.
The job required drilling aluminum,
and tiny shards and slivers of metal were going to fly everywhere. It’s not
something you want to do over carpet, so I decided to do it in my kitchen.
Did it work? Hell yes, it did. After
three hours of work with light tools, I had built the essential component of an
AR-15 rifle. America has now reached a point where people can construct modern
weapons in their kitchens.
Is this awesome, crazy—or both?
In my extended group of friends, seven
of us own AR-15-type rifles. Perhaps not coincidentally, we each bought one
after turning 40.
Buying this kind of rifle is the
modern version of getting a Corvette during your mid-life crisis—but cheaper
and probably less dangerous.
There’s a subculture—and cottage
industry to support it—around AR-15 rifles. After adding accessories to my
first rifle, swapping out parts and purchasing tools, I realized I had a knack
for it.
I was an AR-15 grease monkey. During
the course of several projects, I’d built an entire rifle from scratch. But I’d
never built the lower receiver of an AR-15. By U.S. government standards, I’d
be manufacturing a firearm.
The Last 20 Percent
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms controls the sale of AR-15 lower receivers. As far as the law is
concerned, the lower receiver is the weapon. It’s one of the few parts you
absolutely need to make a functioning firearm, and they’re usually stamped with
a serial number.
AR-15 enthusiasts who build their
rifles at home must go to a gun store to buy a complete lower receiver. They
undergo a federal background check, and other state laws—such as a 10-day
waiting period—may apply.
But there’s a way to dispense with
the background check and other state laws—and that’s a so-called “80-percent”
lower receiver. This is a lower receiver with only four-fifths of the aluminum
finishing done. You do the rest yourself.
The ATF recognizes the right of
Americans to build their own firearms. It also recognizes that a lower
receiver, only 80-percent finished, is technically not a firearm and thus not
subject to regulation.
Anyone can go online and order an
unfinished lower receiver for delivery to his or her home. All you need to
finish it is a router, hand drill, vise and drill bits. Patience, a willingness
to follow directions and more patience are also essential.
Once you’ve completed the remaining
20 percent of the machining, you’ve got yourself what the ATF considers a
firearm. You don’t have to register it, do a background check or add a serial
number. You can now buy the rest of the rifle off the shelf and build it
yourself.
The idea of completing the circle by
building my own AR-15 lower was something I couldn’t get out of my head. The
zen aspect—like completing a bonsai tree by trimming away everything that
wasn’t the tree—held particular appeal.
Trial and Error
My first stop was a company in Santa
Ana, California that makes 80-percent lower receivers. I bought the receiver, a
jig—which showed me what to mill—and a drill bit kit.
To round out my supplies, I ordered
a router—the kind that builds furniture—from Amazon. I would use my own
electric drill.
I assembled the vise in my kitchen
and went to work. This would be my first time working with metal. First, I
drilled six holes into the top of the lower receiver. As I drilled into the
receiver’s 6061 aluminum body, tiny pieces of metal piled up on the floor.
Starting now, I was across the legal
Rubicon. Once I’d drilled out the tiniest bit of aluminum from the lower, this
hunk of metal legally became, according to the ATF, an “other” firearm.
After I drilled out the holes, I
turned to the router. Using an end mill, I slowly connected the freshly-drilled
holes, forming a pocket where I’d later insert the trigger and safety.
It was delicate work. Trying to mill
out too much aluminum at once risked shattering the end mill. Go slow and it
cuts aluminum like butter. Go too fast and you can, as I learned the hard way,
shatter an end mill.
Three hours of work later, the job
was done. The milled pocket exposed raw aluminum—and the result wasn’t pretty.
My first complete lower looked like a monkey made it with a Dremel tool.
But the mess was on the inside of
the rifle, and once I had installed the proper parts, nobody was going to
notice.
Isn’t This Dangerous?
Should people be concerned that you
can make a gun with a 30-round magazine in your own home, completely undetected
by the government?
Theoretically, yes. Just like
theoretically, it’s not a good idea to let people own cars that drive 200 miles
per hour.
The reality is that Americans use
AR-15s and their assorted variants in a surprisingly small number of gun
crimes. In 2013, the latest year for which the FBI has statistics, 12,253
people were murdered in America. Of those, handgun deaths comprised 5,782.
Total long gun deaths, covering
everything from hunting rifles to AR-15s, comprised 285. By comparison, in 2011
Americans killed 428 of their fellow citizens with blunt objects, such as clubs
and hammers.
AR-15s may seem like an ideal weapon
for criminals, but most of them are more than 30 inches long, making them
really, really hard to hide. A criminal has to conceal a gun before—and often
after—committing a crime. It’s no coincidence that handguns outnumber rifles 20
to one in gun-related homicides.
Still, not everyone needs to be
discreet. Some, like mass shooters, just want to kill a lot of people.
Will people like these circumvent
the law and mill out their own 80-percent receivers? There are always
exceptions, but generally no. Education and personality factors create a
threshold not everyone can cross.
If you’re a regular person, it’s not
difficult to build an AR-15. If you’re an outlier, beset by a mental health
issues that warp your perception of reality, it’s probably not going to work
out for you.
Back at my desk, I took the finished
lower and set about making it into a functional weapon. I installed the
trigger, safety selector and other parts inside the newly-milled pocket.
To my mild surprise, everything fit.
The safety selector, in particular, has a gritty feel to it. But it works.
A quick confession—my new firearm
isn’t technically an AR-15, but an AR-10. This variant is similar except that
it fires a more powerful 7.62-millimeter NATO bullet, compared to the standard
AR-15’s 5.56-millimeter round.
I haven’t turned it into a
full-fledged rifle, yet. I didn’t build the lower receiver just so I could add
a weapon to my collection.
I did it because I could.
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