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Kalashnikov USA AK family (and AK-pattern variants generally)
The AK family was one of the original SOR/2020-96 pattern bans. Commercial civilian AK-pattern rifles were prohibited in May 2020.
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The AK family was one of the original SOR/2020-96 pattern bans. Commercial civilian AK-pattern rifles were prohibited in May 2020.
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The Czech military rifle the Canadian sport-shooting community wrongly called an AK for thirty years. SOR/2020-96 named it as one of the original nine families.
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The civilian M14. SOR/2020-96 named "US Rifle M14" as one of the original nine families. The M1A is the family on the Canadian market.
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Eugene Stoner's other rifle. US Air Force .22 survival rifle, stowable into its buttstock. Currently Non-restricted; clean 2/15.
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The rifle that defined the .30-30 cartridge and the deer-camp lever-action category. 1894 design, 2026 production, Non-restricted across both endpoints.
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The American bolt-action that became the platform. Sixty-four years of continuous production. The receiver the chassis industry builds around.
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Sako's 2020 modular platform — one receiver, two configurations. Premium-tier Finnish engineering at the top of the bolt-action ladder.
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The premium-tier American rimfire precision rifle. Rem 700 footprint in .22 LR. The fourth 0/15 on the Index.
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The original bullpup service rifle. Austrian Bundesheer 1977; SOR/2020-96 named the family in May 2020. The category's reference case.
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The first Sterling Arms prohibition. Prohibited by OIC December 2024. The R9 MK1 (pilot) was prohibited by FRT reclassification seven months later.
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An Olympic-grade German rimfire match rifle in AR styling. The rubric scored it 9/15; the OIC made it Already Gone for the styling alone.
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The Swiss premium PCC. Fit, finish, and finish-tier price. Named alongside the entry-tier Hi-Point Carbines in the same Order in Council.