AWB advocates and opponents alike stated that the AWB allowed firearms manufacturers to make minor changes to make their affected firearms legal, and they both described the features affected by the ban as "cosmetic".<4><5> Due to this, some gun-rights groups nicknamed the legislation the "ugly gun law."
The law banned certain feature combinations that many firearms experts considered to be arbitrary. Manufacturers complied with the law by removing the banned features while leaving the core functionality of the weapons intact. For this, they were criticized as attempting to circumvent the spirit of the law by many gun control groups and even by then-president Bill Clinton. Pro-gun groups responded by pointing out that the manufacturers made and sold exactly what was permitted, and that they could not be held to any standard higher than the law itself.
For example, the AB-10 was a legal version of the TEC-9, with barrel threading and barrel shroud removed; the XM-15 was a legal AR-15 without barrel threading or a bayonet mounting lug; post-ban semi-automatic AK-47s were also sold without folding stocks or bayonet lugs, and with standard or "thumbhole" stocks instead of pistol grips. As the production of large-capacity magazines for civilians had also been prohibited, manufacturers sold their post-ban firearms either with newly-manufactured magazines with capacities of ten rounds or less, or with pre-ban manufactured high-capacity magazines, to meet changing legal requirements.
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The law prohibited newly-manufactured detachable magazines with a capacity of more than ten rounds manufactured after enactment of the law from sale, transfer, or importation. One effect was the increased importation from other countries of large quantities of magazines manufactured before the ban
. Former Warsaw Pact countries had large quantities of AK-47 magazines of various capacities that could fit a variety of both pre-ban and post-ban AK-47 variants. Existing stocks of pre-ban American-made magazines were likewise exempt from the ban; this resulted in a brief surge in domestic manufacture of high-capacity magazines before the law took effect.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Assault_Weapons_Ban#Provisions_of_the_ban Before the "ban" I knew very few shooters who owned or had any interest in owning an "assault weapon". After the ban, I was one of the few that just didn't have to have one. After the ban, assault weapons sold like hot cakes. And all the owners needed "hi-cap" magazines to increase firepower. They were very easy to obtain but very expensive.
All the assault weapons ban accomplished was to make an uncommon and unpopular style of rifle and transform it into one of the most popular and common rifles in the U.S. today. As more and more people bought these firearms, they began to realize just how superior they were in terms of accuracy and ease of handling. Today they are very popular target rifles and are manufactured in larger calibers suitable for deer hunting.
Shooting with each of these fine firearms was a pleasure. The AR-15 rifle system has proven itself in recent years to be an excellent platform for a varmint and target rifle. With practice and a good scope sight, accurate hits at several hundred yards are easy. The recoil is light, and the ergonomics of the AR system is almost perfect. The heavy barrels on these guns are free-floated for consistent accuracy. The flat top receivers are perfect for mounting a precision scope. I like to keep a heavy and a light AR around, but if I had to choose only one, I would keep a heavy. They are easier to shoot well at long range, have less muzzle blast, and greater velocity than a short barrel. For a fast shooting varmint gun, they cant be beat. For a police sniper rifle, the heavy AR is almost perfect. Where legal, they make a good deer rifle with the proper ammo in skilled hands. Follow-up shots on a running coyote are easier with a heavy AR than any other type of rifle.
http://www.gunblast.com/AR15_HBARs.htm The popularity of these firearms is largely due to the efforts of the gun ban crowd. My thanks, you guys rock!