That's really nice of them, but the Sub2000 as a "go to war" rifle? Huh.
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Adrian Kellgren, director of industrial production of KelTec, holds a 9mm SUB2000 rifle, similar to ones being shipped to Ukraine, at their manufacturing facility on Thursday, March 17, 2022, in Cocoa, Fla. Kellgren's family-owned gun company was left holding a $200,000 shipment of semi-automatic rifles after a longtime customer in Odessa suddenly went silent during Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. Fearing the worst, the company decided to put those stranded 400 guns to good use, sending them to Ukraine's nascent resistance movement.
THIS!The sub 2k may not be a great battle rifle, but when you shift your thinking from the frontlines to a resistance it starts to make sense. Something light, foldable, easy to hide, that can quickly be deployed and if used properly the sub 2k owner should be able to upgrade to an AK platform in no time.
That is if it actually fires and you don't hear "click".A shot well placed from a "Sub-Par" , "Cheap" , "Not first choice" etc...rifle....
Can make someone just as dead as a well placed shot from a high end , top of the line rifle.
Andy
Not quite my point.That is if it actually fires and you don't hear "click".
This exactly, especially the feed ramp….Did they get all the Mcarbo upgrades with them? If not, well dang sorry Ukraine.