Corby Hall
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
One being that it can fold, obviously, and the other that is not so obvious is the quick change barrel system.
And so with just a push of a pen, you can take the entire barrel system off and swap it with a different barrel system of a different length or caliber.
And so in the case of the AR-15, the most common calibers are 5.56 or .223, same caliber there, and .300 blackout.
So we sell proportionately 60 to 40, you know, 60% the 556 and maybe 40% 300 blackout.
And so it's very common.
Being that the ballistics report of the shooting is a .30 caliber, that doesn't necessarily mean .30-06.
And so it could be a number of .30 caliber, which is the diameter, .30 inches.
It could be any number of different cartridges, but all .30 caliber.
Again, speculation.
I'm not hanging my hat on this.
We don't see much evidence.
We see a few things.
But the scenario is you have a backpack, you have a rifle that fits in it, and it would not necessarily have to be a full AR.
There are some other models where you can take the barrel off with different means, but they're not very popular.
In the case of a Fold AR, you could have the folded rifle in a backpack and another barrel system in it.
And so you get to a shooting position, you take the rifle out, you unfold it, latch it, take your shot.
You fold it, pop the pin, take that barrel system off, grab the other barrel system that's in the backpack, connect it to the receiver set, throw the other barrel, the freshly shot barrel system back in the backpack or wrapped around a towel.
And you either leave the gun there
and you take the backpack and the towel and the barrel system with you and jump off a building.
You shoot a bullet out of one system, one barrel system, and then you swap it over to another, and your bullet profile doesn't match.