Quoted By:
For something more professionally made, here's a Romanian Draco, imported to America as a semi-automatic pistol, then registered as an SBR, being fitted with the old fashioned AKS underfolding stock, and then a Romanian vertical front-grip, colloquially referred to as a 'Donkey Dong' in the US.
I'm not usually a fan of the Romanian 'dong' foregrip, it doesn't really jive with the lines on full length AKs in my opinion (particularly the slanted AKM brake), but in this short carbine format with the 'stubby' front end, it looks a lot more aesthetically pleasing.
These kind of stocks are never the most pleasant for shooting, but they really are very compact, and they neatly clear the 30rd magazine and vertical foregrip like these to fold up.
The Draco originally is a short carbine variant of the local Romanian AKM family, designated "PM md. 90", bearing a gas-block with a combined front-sight, and then the side-folding wire stock as you'd typically see on Romanian and East German AKMs during the Warsaw Pact days. Compare to the Yugoslavian M92 carbine, and its semi-automatic 'pistol' counterpart, as well as the Russian AKs-74u. The rear tangent sight is actually changed to reflect the shorter range, being adjustable up to (the still optimistic) 500 meters, as opposed to the typical 1000 meters of regular Romanian AKs.
This one is the classic 7.62x39mm, but there were some 5.56x45mm ones imported to the US (probably a commercial invention by Cugir). This gun lacks the typical birdcage or slotted, conical flash-hider of the original military PM md. 90 models, but apparently just a nut on a threaded muzzle wasn't unusual on the originals.