PSA AK-P7 GF3 7.62x39 Pistol, 10.5 in Nitrided Barrel, Forged Trunnion/Bolt/Carrier, Magpul FDE, 4 Magazines
This Palmetto State Armory AK-P7 GF3 is a U.S.-made AKM-pattern pistol chambered in 7.62x39 and built on a stamped steel receiver. It features the GF3 forged front trunnion, bolt, and carrier, a 10.5-inch 4150 nitrided barrel, and a hinged full-length 1913 Picatinny railed top cover. Outfitted with Magpul FDE furniture and supplied with four 30-round PMAGs, it combines proven AK architecture with modern usability.
Condition
Overall Condition: Very good condition, showing only light, superficial signs of prior handling or use.
Bore Overall Condition: Excellent - Clean, mirror finish, no signs of wear.
Bore Rifling: Excellent Rifling - Sharp lands and grooves.
Specific Condition Notes: The top-cover optic rail shows some blemishing from a previously mounted item. The charging handle has minor scuffing.
What’s Included
- 4 Magpul PMAG AK/AKM 30-round polymer magazines (7.62x39)
- Magpul MOE AKM polymer handguard set (FDE), installed
- Magpul AK-pattern pistol grip (FDE), installed
The AK-P7 GF3 uses a semi-automatic, long-stroke gas piston system with a rotating bolt and a stamped AKM-pattern receiver. The GF3 series upgrades include a forged front trunnion, forged bolt, and forged carrier, delivering a robust core around the 7.62x39 chambering.
Its 10.5-inch barrel is made from 4150 steel and finished in a nitride treatment, with a 1:9.5 twist for 7.62x39 projectiles. The muzzle is threaded M24x1.5 RH and fitted with the factory mini-Krink muzzle device.
Sighting is handled by fixed iron sights, with a combination front sight and gas block and a fixed rear sight integrated into the hinged, full-length 1913 Picatinny railed top cover. The rear trunnion features a 1913 interface.
Magpul furniture in Flat Dark Earth includes the MOE AKM handguard with M-LOK slots and the AK-pattern pistol grip. Capacity is 30+1, and this pistol ships with four Magpul PMAG AK/AKM 30-round magazines to get you running immediately.




