Only issue with setting up an AK like that is that the vert grip keeps you from the magazines hinging all the way. At worse you can't remove the mag. At best, when you kick the mag out it bumps the grip and hangs up for a second while you wait for it to drop, or when you insert, you snap the retention tab in first, locking the mag uselessly hanging off the mag catch until you pry it out.
AKs need either a short grip, angled grip, handstop, or a picatinny rail adapter with an offset to the left or right. Also the inforce light needs to be mounted to one of the side rails to hit the momentary with your thumb, or how most do, use a 45 degree rail adapter on the bottom corner of the quad rail so it can be engaged with the thumb no matter which side you fire from.
And personally, any time the firing hand is on the grip, the safety is engaged off. Sure the current trend is safety on until immediately firing, but especially with the AK's lever safety, it is too easy to fumble and that fraction of a second counts. It isn't like it makes you safer anyways. Manual safeties are not automatic, and so human error is still present. If you are at risk of screwing up and hitting the trigger and getting an AD, you are equally likely to forget which setting the safety is on and get a bang when you want silence, or silence when you want bang. Manual safeties are for when you stow your gun such as slung or otherwise out of your immediate control. The only reason training courses do the active manipulation of safeties for each firing string is for liability as it is easier for an instructor to diagnose a shooter (that he doesn't know their background) and see how much safety discipline they have which can be a risk later on in the course when more complex drills are done.
It's also kinda weird how it has a 74 gas block, but a 47 mag. Gunsmith special mismatched parts kit I guess.