Since the statute of limitations expired on this long ago, I can tell you that in my young, dumb college days I got the bright idea to turn my Ruger .22 auto pistol into a machine pistol. After disassembling the gun, I realized the process was childishly simple...just file down the disconnect lever so it isn't tripped each time the bolt blows back.
What followed afterwards I wasn't quite ready for. The first few times I tried to fire the gun it would rip off several rounds and jam because it was firing before locking up and blowing the head off the .22 cases. And it was blowing my extractor away when it did it.
I kept ordering new extractors from Ruger and wondering how long it would be before they figured out my antics. But as luck would have it I finally found a .22 ammunition that would actually feed and keep firing in the pistol. Federal High Velocity. They worked like a charm and the brass was so thick or tough that the cases only bulged slightly rather than seperate.
NOW I had a working machine pistol. Except it wasn't what I expected at all. I fired the gun at night and it was just one big flash of fire...and that was the end of the whole clip of ammo.
The gun didn't go ratatatatatatat. It just went BAAANG....and that was a whole clip of ammo. No audible separation of individual rounds.
Whenever I fired it, I held the pistol firmly and pulled the trigger. The next thing I knew my hand would be pointing straight up and the pistol locked open, out of ammo. All from a lowly 22????
Finally, I placed a 3 x 6' sheet of rusted tin in front of me and stepped back about 10 feet. Aiming at the bottom of the sheet, I pulled the trigger. Instantly the gun was pointed in the sky and out of ammo.
I checked the sheet metal and found TWO bullet holes in it. EIGHT rounds had missed and likely gone over it.
Conclusion, the conversion was less than worthless. I would have been better served to have a single shot derringer.
My next order to Ruger was for a new disconnect lever and I restored my fine Ruger pistol to the way it was designed.
Converting almost any firearm to full auto is both dangerous and foolish. With high power arms, it can be deadly dangerous.
It might make an interesting tale but it's not a place I want to go again.