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In court filings, the ATF said testing on the FRT-15 triggers showed their rate of fire can meet or exceed that the military’s M-16 machine gun, which can fire 700 to 970 rounds a minute.
In court filings, the ATF said testing on the FRT-15 triggers showed their rate of fire can meet or exceed that the military’s M-16 machine gun, which can fire 700 to 970 rounds a minute.
Maxwell said it’s not possible to tell from the video if the trigger is an FRT-15. The zip-tie could also act as a spring with enough play to trip the trigger when it resets, and by adding the ...
Rare Breed started selling its forced-reset trigger, known as the FRT-15, nationwide in December 2020. The company’s attorney and owner, Kevin Maxwell, called the FRT-15 a legal semiautomatic ...
Rare Breed Triggers has released an updated lineup of its Forced Reset Triggers (FRT), including the original FRT-15, and the more advanced E3, L2, and L3 models—each offering improvements in ...
The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in 2021 ordered Rare Breed Triggers to stop selling its model FRT-15 trigger, declaring the devices illegal machine guns.
Rare Breed Triggers, founded in Florida and now based in Fargo, North Dakota, has sold about 100,000 FRT-15s since December 2020, taking in $39 million in revenue, according to court filings.
The FRT-15 trigger, which is made by Rare Breeds, is at the center of a legal dispute between the ATF and the manufacturer, with ATF officials trying to stop the part's production. Officials with ...
Rare Breed Triggers, founded in Florida and now based in Fargo, North Dakota, has sold about 100,000 FRT-15s since December 2020, taking in $39 million in revenue, according to court filings.